See oscargrantprotests.com
by Poornima Weerasekara
Editor's Note: In the aftermath of the Oscar Grant verdict a team of
citizen vigilantes used Ushahidi,
an open source disaster mapping platform developed in Africa and
Twitter to minimize harm and save lives during the unrest that followed,
by giving real-time updates to the community. Ordinary citizens also
used social media to amplify the call for non-violence amidst the
looting and vandalism. As mainstream media churned out photos of
shattered windows and burning dumpsters, the twittersphere, with the
actual voices of the people on the ground, told a different story.
OAKLAND Calif. -- A chirping sound on his laptop alerted George
Chamales, a self anointed freelance hacker, that the Foot Locker, a
sports shoe shop in downtown Oakland had been vandalized, 15 minutes
before the news appeared either on a police radio wave streamed online
or on any mainstream media outlet.
Chameles and his girltfriend
were mapping notable incidents of violence in Downtown Oakland on
Thursday night, using Ushahidi - a disaster mapping platform first built
in Kenya.
Their aim was to prevent any loss of innocent
lives, in the chaos that ensued after the peaceful protests demanding
justice for Oscar Grant, a 22-year-old unarmed black youth shot by a
BART cop, turned sour.
“I discovered Ushahidi in April, when I
saw it successfully deployed in
Haiti, to map the devastation from the earthquake . It is an open
source platform that aims to provide reliable, real-time information
about a crisis as it unfolds, to help people on the ground stay informed
as be safe,” said Chameles, an independent Computer Security
Consultant.
The Oakland Police had braced themselves for a
riot as the accused ex-BART officer Johannes Mehserle received a verdict
of involuntary manslaughter on Thursday, June 8.
“I realized
that I could use this tool in my own backyard, to help the community
and to relay truthful facts about what happens. I started working on it
just 2 days before the verdict was due, and was able to have the oscargrantprotests.com
site up about an hour before the verdict was announced at 4.00 p.m.,”
said Chameles a resident of Oakland’s Rockridge neighborhood.
Although this was the first time that a white cop was convicted of a
significant felony in California for shooting an unarmed Black man, many
felt the verdict was inadequate. Crowds poured to 14th Street and
Broadway, demanding justice.
Chameles scanned Tweetdeck, a tool used to follow
several twitter streams at once, for the latest updates from people on
the ground, while listening to a police radio signal that was streamed
online. He also browsed mainstream media websites to verify the updates
he was getting through twitter about the ground situation.
“We
called the Oakland police riot tip-off line and informed them about the
site. We also informed the Oakland Red Cross that had a team of
volunteers on the ground,” Chamalese said. As the evening progressed his
site became a central reference point for people to check whether BART
stations were closed, or find out where the looting was happening
Both BART(@SFBART) and the
Oakland Police (@OaklandpoliceCA)
had their own twitter streams to provide situation updates. But, as
Oakland Police Public Information Officer Holly Joshi noted, this was
the first time they were experimenting with this tool in a crisis
situation, and there was a significant time-lapse between when the
information came in and was relayed to the public.
“At one
point we received information that the 19th Street BART Station in
Oakland was closed. Just as we were about to tweet it, we saw that
BART’s official twitter account had sent a newer update saying that it
was reopened. When we called to double check we realized that the
confusion was due to delays in getting the right information to the
people handling the official social media tools at BART,” Joshi said.
It was in instances like this, where Chameles’s website
oscargrantprotests.com had an edge over the official channels of
communication and the mainstream media.
“We were experiencing
all the action from a meta-pervasive level. We were tracking the voices
of many people, who were tweeting real-time from the ground. So we had
the advantage of having hundreds of eye-witness accounts, compared to
that of the official channels that were limited,” Chameles said.
In several instances. Chameles knew about a violent incident on the
ground 10 to 20 minutes before it was broadcast in the traditional
media.
“We were looking at mainstream media to verify the facts
we were getting mainly through twitter feeds. But after some time we
realized that there was a way to validate the authenticity of the tweets
we were getting, by looking at the past content. As we followed the
information related by different individuals, we quickly spotted who had
been consistently accurate about incidences. We picked them up as
trustworthy sources,” Chameles explained.
Interestingly, tweets
from professional journalists on the ground, emerged as some of the
most trustworthy sources of information.
Chameles and his
girlfriend tracked the incidents till around 1.00 a.m, when the action
died down and the police retreated.
“I felt that the overall
protest was relatively calm, despite the incidents of vandalism as I
tracked the wave of real-time information. A lot fo the sentiments
expressed in the twittersphere reinforced the call for non-violence,”
Chameles said.
Many micro-bloggers who were tweeting from the
ground were disappointed with the screaming headlines in the mainstream
media the next day.
“The newspapers and websites were filled
with pictures of broken glasses, the graffiti and the few dumpsters that
were burnt. But there were more people who came out and tried to say
that violence was not justice. How did the media miss that point?”
questioned a citizen blogger who microblogs with the twitter-handle @OakFoSho.
The
crowds also started retweeting the message “Peopl starting to break
windows at the Rite Aid. Come on #Oakland, stay #NonViolent! #OscarGrant
#protest at 16th & Broadway” as the vandalism began, as a way of
denouncing the violence.
Another popular sentiment that was
echoing in the twittersphere was that “Post-racism will be the shortest
era in American history ever. Welcome to post-post-racism. Or in other
words, back to racism,” tweeted by @dahlak.
Fan pages had also sprung up on facebook, both supporting and
opposing the verdict and provided a discussion forum on whether justice
was delivered in the case. They were also rallying points for organizing
future protests, to keep the memory of Oscar Grant alive.
Robert Gerstle -- an Oakland Resident who was part of the “Violence is
not Justice” protest that was organized by the community groups, Youth
Uprising and the Urban Peace Movement -- witnessed how civilians were
trying in some instances to stop the recklessness on their own as “…the
OPD stood around and watched while they maintained scrimmage".
“Those individuals didn’t get much media attention as to their efforts
to convey the Grant family’s wishes for peace. Honestly, the next day I
told my friends not to even bother looking at the newspapers. There
shots and stories only reinforce their own macabre beliefs about the
people of Oakland,” Gerstle said.
Reprinted from New America Meda, Intersections, http://bit.ly/beKEsk