Twitter, Google, Facebook -Social Networks Join Hands to Help Make the World a Better Place | The Daily Galaxy: News from Planet Earth & Beyond

January 19, 2008 – 14:37

Twitter, Google, Facebook -Social Networks Join Hands to Help Make the World a Better Place | The Daily Galaxy | News from Planet Earth and Beyond

The Daily Galaxy, one of my all-time favourite websites, has a story about three big web giants, who has started an initiative where their powerful worldwide and instantaneous communications technology are going to be used to do some good. It looks like it will mostly focus on co-ordinating amongst rescue workers in the case of a humanitarian relief effort, and also as an instant news updating source about conditions and circumstances at a certain location; anywhere in the world.

This certainly is very encouraging to see, one reads in the media only of the sensationalist headline grabbing bylines; Facebook productivity drain blah blah blah; Twitter ego-boosting mundane chattering. It is unfortunate that those who lend themselves to insincere sensation does not stop and realize that there is more to life than running up hits and clicks on your website.

The majority of users of these services also will realize at some point that it can be used as more than just a toy to poke and zombie bite your buddies or letting everyone know what you just threw at the lecturer. It can be used to let everyone in a certain region know what is happening where and where to go to find help and resources. Relief workers also can stay in instant communication with each other and mission control and so be more effective and timely in cases of natural and other diasters.

One of the applications that this project will focus around is the ability that Twitter has to work between the internet and mobile phones.

Using a location detection feature, a message sent from a phone from the middle of Africa, will tie in with a layer on Google Earth, pinpointing the senders location, with the text message requesting help. Aid workers from UNICEFF or the InSTEDD’s headquarters in Palo Alto, California, could then read the message, and provide assistance.

“We can send an SMS message onto Google Earth in an emergency center, and it sees a dot with a color-coded response, with my name and date. Right underneath that, there’s a button that says reply, and (aid workers can send a note that says) we have the resources you need 2 miles north…Suddenly there’s a two-way conversation using nothing but a cell phone with one bar,” said Rasmussen, adding: “We’ve done this.

Lastly, I want to touch on the intention of users of tools. It is really a fundamental principle of the intention of any user of a tool, how that tool will be utilized and how such utilitarian use are viewed by others affected by your use of said tool.

In real life, if you use a screwdriver to fix an appliance, you’re called a technician or whatnot. Use that same screwdriver to stab someone seventeen times and society labels you a psychopathic killer and locks you up for life so you cannot be a danger and threat to people who don’t care for your issues…

In the same vein, I would like to challenge all the Facebook haters out there to actually start using the service optimally, for more serious business networking and information gathering. Use Twitter to follow the mindstreams of the pioneers in the tech business and watch and learn from them. Humble down and don’t run after the first nutcase conspiracy theory or sensationalist garbage in the media.

Use the grey matter you have been provided with and use the tools you criticize before using those same services for linkbait and SEO juice to run up the hits. That is EVIL!

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