Disaster Relief and the Internet
I once read a story, I have no idea if it is true but it was about a small village living on an island with a two hills, one was smaller whilst the other was much larger. There was a legend passed down in the form of song in this village that every villager knew, about a tsunami that had washed over the village a very long time before. The legend told that when the tsunami hit, the villagers headed to higher ground, some to the small hill, whilst others went to the much higher one. The song ends in the tsunami washing over the smaller mountain, yet not being large enough to wash over the second mountain, sparing the villages who sought refuge there. The whole town knew this song and passed it down for generations until one day another tsunami hit. All the villagers quickly fled to the higher hill and escaped the tsunami, watching it wash over the smaller hill.
I think this story is a fantastic metaphor for how we now have the ability to use social media. We have the ability to immediately share our own experiences to help others, on black Saturday, regular civilians tweeted the exact location and movements of the fires, enabling those who lived in towns close by to evacuate on time. Experts also have the ability to quickly communicate how changes to wind patterns or other weather could affect the fires and who they will effect. I believe we are at a turning point where it is possible for us to have the most immediate disaster communication ever where people can work together to help others and others are always aware of disasters whether they’re tuned in to what is happening or completely unaware. However this has the potential to backfire as well. Because of the introduction of filter bubbles to social media sites like Facebook, and search engines like Google, we are increasingly being only exposed to things that we want to see, rather than things we need to see. In terms of disaster notification this could become a serious issue in the future as people no longer watch television or listen to radio, through which disaster information can be broadcast in an emergency.
I think the emergency information broadcasting over social media is a huge step in the right direction for disseminating information, but I don’t think it can be relied upon to the extent that we have relied on television and radio to spread the information in the past. I think if we are going to rely solely on the internet in the future to spread emergency information, we need a more forceful way of disseminating the information which people can not simply miss by not jumping on Facebook for a day. I think this could be possible, because although people don’t always spend time on social media everyday, it is getting to the point where we are almost always on the internet, and so if we could forcefully push alerts to devices connected to the internet, I believe we could provide a much more effective form of disaster communication.
I've also posted a 30 second video from the U.K. television show the IT crowd that deals with emergency relief in a ridiculous but hilarious way.















