Garuda Aerospace has deployed over ten drones to the Indian Army for the ongoing flood relief operations in Jammu and Kashmir, and Himachal
#iwtv#interview with the vampire#amc tvl#sam reid#jacob anderson

seen from Italy
seen from Italy
seen from Russia
seen from China

seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Finland
seen from Germany
seen from Yemen

seen from United States
seen from Poland
seen from United States

seen from Bosnia & Herzegovina
seen from Poland
seen from China
seen from Malaysia
seen from Germany

seen from Poland
seen from Canada
seen from Yemen
Garuda Aerospace has deployed over ten drones to the Indian Army for the ongoing flood relief operations in Jammu and Kashmir, and Himachal
What do people working in the humanitarian sector think of drones?
Drones in Humanitarian Action - A survey on perceptions and applications Published September 2016
The Swiss Foundation for Mine Action (FSD) has released a survey on how drones are viewed by people in the humanitarian sector - the first of its kind. It’s part of a wider initiative by the European Commission to study the use of drones in humanitarian crises.
Only one in ten respondents had actual experience with drones in humanitarian work. Those who had experienced them were more likely to see them as a good thing.
Overall, the majority (61%) of respondents viewed the use of drones in humanitarian work positively. The key benefit cited was that drones can provide faster, better access in dangerous situations or hard-to-reach areas. Interestingly, though, opinions were split (40% to 41%) on whether drones should be used in conflict settings.
Many emphasised that drones can improve – but not replace – the work of ground teams.
A significant minority (22%) viewed the use of drones unfavourably for three main reasons:
The technology creates distance between beneficiaries and aid workers.
Potential association with military applications.
Lack of added value delivered by the use of drones.
Most respondents agreed that clear guidance and rules for using drones in humanitarian work was needed, as well as better coordination and experience with using the technology. This is vital to ensure that the data collected with drones is handled safely and responsibly by humanitarian organisations. This was summed up well by one respondent:
“I have no doubt that there’s potential in the use of drones for humanitarian activities [but] basically, I don’t trust the humanitarian industry to use them responsibly at this point in time.”
Mapping and Comparing Responsible Data Approaches
Download paper here [PDF]
by Jos Berens, Ulrich Mans, and Stefaan Verhulst
This paper, released in July 2016, looks at the scope and reach of various policies which address elements of responsible data. Interestingly, only one of the 17 policies chosen for inclusion here is actually labelled as a “responsible data policy” (from Oxfam) - the others are labelled as addressing Data Protection, Privacy, or Data Sharing.
The paper goes through various elements of these policies, looking at similarities and differences between them. The takeaways from this analysis centre around implementation of policies (leadership, accountability, feedback loops), accessibility (clear language), and learning (what works, what doesn’t, and iterating.)
The paper seems to be aimed at those working in the humanitarian space rather than more broadly, but has useful and interesting lessons for people looking at creating privacy/data sharing policies.
Mapping Refugee Media Journeys
The "Mapping Refugee Media Journeys" project, by the Open University and France Médias Monde, looks at how Syrian and Iraqi refugees use technology and suggests ways of using this to help the most vulnerable refugees.
It’s based on interviews with more than 50 Syrian and Iraqi refugees in France and the UK, analysis of refugee social networks (Facebook and Twitter), and interviews with the European Commission, international media and NGOs.
Here are some of the key points we picked out:
Unsurprisingly, responsible data was a big concern:
Refugees will not share personal information online, preferring to remain anonymous for fear of reprisals, surveillance, detention and/ or deportation.
The digital tools and resources that help, guide and comfort refugees are also used to exploit, monitor and track them.
For example, researchers found that interviewees followed news on Whatsapp mainly because they trusted that the service (unlike Twitter and Facebook) wasn’t under surveillance.
Refugees also rarely used resources produced by national or state‐funded organisations, and were often driven towards “unofficial, potentially dangerous and exploitative resources” as a result.
The report gives practical recommendations to deal with this (informed by Aspiration Tech guidelines and Oxfam’s Responsible Data policy, among others). They include designing tools that don’t asking refugees to disclose any information about themselves, and recommending that any information sources include warnings about the known risks of financial exploitation by taxi/private drivers or smuggling networks.
Highlighting the daily changing nature of the situation in border areas, the researchers criticised the plethora of hackathons to create tools, saying:
any resource must be frequently updated in order to avoid it doing more harm than good with misinformation....there is a real danger that quick tech fix initiatives are not viable or sustainable. A sustainable resource of the kind that international news organisations might provide would offer a more viable alternative.
They argue that any digital outreach project should be “highly personal” and ensure that "trusted individuals” should have a continuous physical and digital presence at key sites. In particular, they recommend drawing on sustainable existing networks (such as by encouraging refugees to ask for help and counseling from local NGO staff) and understanding shifting local conditions on‐the‐ground experience. They also found that, despite the range of tools available, there was little content available in key areas, notably "relevant high quality legal information...and sources of information about language learning facilities”.
Download paper here
Applying Humanitarian Principles to Current Uses of Information Communication Technologies
This paper by Nathaniel Raymond and Brittany Card argues that we need minimum standards for mobile network access and coverage, providing ICT services for vulnerable people, providing early warning to people at risk, involving communities in ICT programme design, and assessing the data accessibility needs of particular populations.
Download paper
The goal of this paper is to identify and address current gaps, challenges and opportunities that face the humanitarian sector as it seeks to apply traditional humanitarian principles to the increasingly central role information communication technologies (ICTs) play in 21st Century humanitarian operations. While much has been written about the roles ICTs may play in support of humanitarian action, there is an absence of literature addressing how core humanitarian principles should guide, limit, and shape the use of these technologies in practice.