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Nepal Earthquake: Facebook To Google, How Tech Is Helping Survivors Reach Out 39

An anonymous reader writes: In the aftermath of the earthquake that struck Nepal, many social media sites and mobile applications have come up with features that could help locate friends and loved ones. From the Times of India: "Social networking website Facebook, and Google's Person Finder have helped locate the whereabouts of those stranded in quake-hit areas. For instance, members of one Himmatramka family residing in Birgunj in Nepal marked themselves safe on Facebook. 'Our relatives back in India were worried about our safety. So, we marked ourselves safe to inform them,' said Nitesh Himmatramka.
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Nepal Earthquake: Facebook To Google, How Tech Is Helping Survivors Reach Out

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  • by ls671 ( 1122017 ) on Sunday April 26, 2015 @10:34AM (#49554759) Homepage

    Just be prudent although, every catastrophe like this one bring along a bunch of people how are just trying to make a buck out of it. Don't get scammed.

  • by Iamthecheese ( 1264298 ) on Sunday April 26, 2015 @10:38AM (#49554777)
    Since Fukushima tens of companies have developed search and rescue robots. This would be the perfect time to deploy them for a field test.
    • by Anonymous Coward
      The Transformers are currently having a small party inside the Fukushima reactor and are unavailable, sorry.
  • by tomhath ( 637240 ) on Sunday April 26, 2015 @10:49AM (#49554809)

    'Our relatives back in India were worried about our safety. So, we marked ourselves safe to inform them,'

    I would've sent them an email first. I suppose broadcasting on FB in addition to that could be useful but it wouldn't be my primary means of communication

    • by Anonymous Coward

      I would've sent them an email first. I suppose broadcasting on FB in addition to that could be useful but it wouldn't be my primary means of communication

      You just dated yourself. It is mostly just people that are 30+ that still use email on any sort of a regular basis. It would be sort of like letting everyone know you are safe via telegraph.

      • There are some things about human contact that have lasted the ages. One of them is the need to directly communicate with each-other. Expecting your friends to visit a website on a regular basis if they want communication from you is inconsiderate, and that transcends generational boundaries. Sure it works with "friends" (who used to be known as acquaintances) but if you're trying to tell me the new generation doesn't actually have friends close enough for direct communication I'll call you disconnected fr
      • You just dated yourself. It is mostly just people that are 30+ that still use email on any sort of a regular basis. It would be sort of like letting everyone know you are safe via telegraph.

        No, texting would be like letting everyone know you are safe via telegraph. Facebook would be like letting everyone know via a billboard that people may not drive by or pay attention to.

    • by oodaloop ( 1229816 ) on Sunday April 26, 2015 @11:34AM (#49554959)
      If you have 2 friends, then emailing all both of them makes sense. When you have hundreds, making one small setting on FB and getting back to important stuff makes a little more sense.
      • Very, very few people have 'hundreds' of actual friends. Facebook 'friends', maybe. IOW, people you've never met.
  • by BlueScreenO'Life ( 1813666 ) on Sunday April 26, 2015 @11:34AM (#49554953)
    Red cross has a family links [icrc.org] database. I wish Google and Facebook just linked to Red Cross, instead of launching each their own redundant person finder features.
    • Re:Red Cross (Score:4, Insightful)

      by Dutch Gun ( 899105 ) on Sunday April 26, 2015 @12:15PM (#49555093)

      Honestly, my take is that this feature on Facebook / Google makes a lot of sense. How many people would think to first check the Red Cross website first (or specifically, the site you linked to, which I couldn't seem to find via the main site)? People are much more likely to *first* check Facebook to see if their family or friends have posted an update. These are social networks already in place, so why not use them for an important feature that's obviously "social" in nature?

      The Red Cross feature is fantastic for people who aren't already hooked up with Google or Facebook. But honestly, who wants to do that when they can click a single button on their already-used social network of choice, versus the battery of personal data you have to enter at the Red Cross? Consider the Facebook or Google feature as a first-line system. If a person doesn't mark themselves safe, family members can then register them as a missing person on the Red Cross site.

      • While there is some overlap between "facebook friends" and actual friends, those groups are very different.

        The feature is convenient on FB and Google, but the problem is redundancy. They serve the same purpose, but they run different databases. Suppose a person in the disaster area who uses G+ frequently and FB rarely. They may never realize FB has the person finder feature, so they mark themselves as safe on G+ but not on FB, or vice-versa.

        That sort of confusion is avoided if only one website provides th

        • Your friends and family would already know which social network you hang out on, and how to contact you. Think about it - what better way is there to use the same social network where you already are regularly in contact with each other? A completely different system used *only* during emergencies? That makes zero sense.

          Also, how do you figure real friends and family are somehow different from Facebook friends? You're suggesting that real-life friends and family don't use Facebook to keep in touch with [readwrite.com]

      • by Livius ( 318358 )

        How many people would think to first check the Red Cross website first

        To be honest, I would have expected the Red Cross to have more important things to do and I wouldn't want to bother them.

        Then again, I would have thought people in a disaster would have more important things to do than to go on Facebook.

        • If you think about it, after a disaster, there's really nothing more important to family members than finding out if a loved one is okay or not as soon as possible. I think the point of this flag is just to obviously signal to everyone "I'm OK" with minimum fuss and bother, because for those in the danger zone, they very likely have other immediate pressing needs.

        • By posting "I'm fine", they clearly were not "people in a disaster". However, they could have been a block or two away from the disaster and thought it important to let people know their status.
        • by rvw ( 755107 )

          How many people would think to first check the Red Cross website first

          To be honest, I would have expected the Red Cross to have more important things to do and I wouldn't want to bother them.

          Then again, I would have thought people in a disaster would have more important things to do than to go on Facebook.

          The Red Cross is a big organisation. They probably have their own IT department, which is located somewhere in Europe or the US, or maybe even in India, but not on the location of the disaster. IT is essential to an organization like the RC, for themselves, but also for victims.

          One essential part of recovery from a disaster is stress release. If you know what happened to your family, that saves you from a lot of stress, the stress of uncertainty, even in the case that they are dead. If they are alive, you c

  • It is worth mentioning the efforts of the Humanitarian OpenStreetMap Team: http://hot.openstreetmap.org/u... [openstreetmap.org]. They don't pretend to solve the whole crisis, but they do try to make navigation in the area a little easier by providing accurate and recent mapping information. At least in earlier crises, the effort was appreciated by the people on the ground: http://www.redcross.org/news/a... [redcross.org].

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