Monday, 29 October 2012

Sukey Team Making a Mashup for #Sandy

To all that asked if #Sukey can be used for crisis mapping, I guess we're about to find out. sukey[dot]org@gmail.com #Sandy #NYC #maptivism
This is a shoutout to all techies that support #sukey @sukeyio please get over to http://irc.lc/freenode/hurricanehackers and signup to collaborate on code for #hurricanehackers projects here: bit.ly/hh-projects 

 
Aim
===
Wise words from a friend: 
"
JFYI, there are a lot of mapping efforts underway; it might make more sense to help with analysis on one of the other mapping projects -- I assume standby task force, for instance, has one going.


Will be using geoJSON and will provide feeds in / out support to facillitate integration with other projects. Also revisioning the geoJSON through git / github. Make a quick OSM map with overlays containing content which reflects thr structure of the standard #Hashtag conventions here
 
Who
===
<collaborators add your name here>
samuelcarlisle@gmail.com/ pgp: 0x54828CAA / twitter: @samthetechie
sukey.org@gmail.com / twitter: @sukeyio

What
====
Based on sukey.io / sukey.org
Who
===
<collaborators add your name here>
samuelcarlisle@gmail.com/ pgp: 0x54828CAA / twitter: @samthetechie
sukey.org@gmail.com / twitter: @sukeyio

What
====
Based on sukey.io / sukey.org

Key Technologies:
Client Side {JS, HTML, CSS, Leaflet.js using geoJSON}
Server Side {Python, Human.io}

Where
====
New York City, USA

Why
===
People before borders. Tech beyond borders. We need to help.
How
===
Make a Mashup which uses open data standards (with feeds available to be plugged into and out of other services) https://github.com/sukey/webapp
N.B these are both really early repositories on github. I need to get a  good few hours hacking on to make them usable. Need to travel home  first from the hackspace and then get down to it.

Research
======

copy-pasta links / dumping ground (todo: meta sort and tag in delicious +++)

Key Technologies:
Client Side {JS, HTML, CSS, Leaflet.js using geoJSON}
Server Side {Python, Human.io}

Where
====
New York City, USA

Why
===
People before borders. Tech beyond borders. We need to help.
How
===
Make a Mashup which uses open data standards (with feeds available to be plugged into and out of other services) https://github.com/sukey/webapp
N.B these are both really early repositories on github. I need to get a  good few hours hacking on to make them usable. Need to travel home  first from the hackspace and then get down to it.

Research
======

copy-pasta links / dumping ground (todo: meta sort and tag in delicious +++)

Saturday, 20 October 2012

SUKEY PRESS RELEASE 8am Oct 20th. FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Introducing Sukey 3 aka. http://sukey.io

Happy 20 October! Have a great march today. New version of Sukey (v. 3.0), the web app that keeps demonstrators safe, mobile and informed, goes live at 11am in solidarity with London's #Oct20 anti-austerity march.
Sukey.io is a new platform which is designed to keep demonstrators safe, mobile and informed and we hope will spur on previously unprecedented levels of collaboration and truly international digital participation and gestures of solidarity during demonstrations, the world over.

Our Aim. 

What we hope is that people will engage with this framework and start  using Sukey.io to support each other at the demo by completing  'microtasks', much like Amazon's Mechnical Turk Service (i.e. small  digital tasks like tagging a photo or linking to a tweet) in order to  help the people on the ground combat issues such as Police Brutality, Kettling, Excessive State Surveillance to name a few but also to have some fun by rating our favourite banners and protest signs and sharing  our favourite chants or quotes from the day with each other online.

What have we learnt over the last few years? Over the years we have learnt that the best opportunities for making  these key observations are on the ground, in the streets, where these  things are actually happening. Furthermore we have learnt that it can be  so valuable when people on the ground have tactical support online i.e.  support from those with a different perspective- outside the  demonstration (with a large computer screen and a cup of tea no doubt!).  So we want to connect these two groups and help them keep an ongoing dialogue going.

So we made you a webapp on which we have been working really hard in  order to make the best app we can with the limited resources that we  have- we really hope you like it. :) It is designed to make it easier to  use Sukey on the move, even though the signal is not that great and the  internet can often be slow.

Lastly, there are also ways in which people can support a demonstration,  wherever they are in the world by helping to verify information coming  out from the protest by searching and using datasets (e.g. twitter,  twitpic, google street view and google maps searches). By participating  you can help solve a real need of people on the ground. For example some  groups of people will take photos of banners and placards, while some  others rate them. Some people will observe which roads have been closed  or are slow to travel down and report them as such while will suggest  alternative routes.

Introduction / Theory

Sukey.io, in concept, could be viewed as a sequence of Stimulus:Response  mappings which have been devised in order to help demonstrators  collaborate effectively during a demonstration.
Example:
Stimulus0: We find a tweet online which says "there is a kettle forming on Whitehall, OMG, get out of there!"
Response0: We launch a localised (to whitehall's co-ordinates and the  immediate locality) micro questionnaire which simply asks: "Is there a  Kettle here?" and can you take a photo of it?
Stimulus1: We receive photos and verification of the fact that the kettle is on
Response1: We can then faithfully tweet out a report that the kettle is indeed happening.

Tuesday, 16 October 2012

Introducing Sukey 3 aka. http://sukey.io

Sukey.io is a new platform which we hope will spur on previously unprecedented levels of collaboration and truly international digital participation and gestures of solidarity during demonstrations, the world over.

Our Aim.

What we hope is that people will engage with this framework and start using Sukey.io to support each other at the demo by completing 'microtasks', much like Amazon's Mechnical Turk Service (i.e. small digital tasks like tagging a photo or linking to a tweet) in order to help the people on the ground  combat issues such as Police Brutality, Kettling, Excessive State Surveillance to name a few but also to have some fun by rating our favourite banners and protest signs and sharing our favourite chants or quotes from the day with each other online.

What have we learnt over the last few years?

Over the years we have learnt that the best opportunities for making these key observations are on the ground, in the streets, where these things are actually happening. Furthermore we have learnt that it can be so valuable when people on the ground have tactical support online i.e. support from those with a different perspective- outside the demonstration (with a large computer screen and a cup of tea no doubt!). So we want to connect these two groups and help them keep an ongoing dialogue going.

Having the Right Tools for the Job

This is why it is so important that you, the protestor, have good tools to work with. Because you need to collect the first-hand source materiel data that makes this whole thing work!
We are talking:

*Android Phone
*Spare Batteries (boughtly cheaperly off Ebay)
*A full list to come In our comic / journal.


So we made you a webapp on which we have been working really hard in order to make the best app we can with the limited resources that we have- we really hope you like it. :) It is designed to make it easier to use Sukey on the move, even though the signal is not that great and the internet can often be slow.


Lastly, there are also ways in which people can support a demonstration, wherever they are in the world by helping to verify information coming out from the protest by searching and using datasets (e.g. twitter, twitpic, google street view and google maps searches). By participating you can help solve a real need of people on the ground. For example some groups of people will take photos of banners and placards, while some others rate them. Some people will observe which roads have been closed or are slow to travel down and report them as such while will suggest alternative routes.

Introduction / Theory

Sukey.io, in concept, could be viewed as a sequence of Stimulus:Response mappings which have been devised in order to help demonstrators collaborate effectively during a demonstration.
Example:
Stimulus0: We find a tweet online which says "there is a kettle forming on Whitehall, OMG, get out of there!"
Response0: We launch a localised (to whitehall's co-ordinates and the immediate locality) micro questionnaire which simply asks: "Is there a Kettle here?" and can you take a photo of it?
Stimulus1: We receive photos and verification of the fact that the kettle is on
Response1: We can then faithfully tweet out a report that the kettle is indeed happening.


Friday, 12 October 2012

Sukey 3 ALPHA for #globalnoise

We are very proud to announce Sukey3 ALPHA for #globalnoise 2pm to 5pm stay-tuned for details on how to connect #sukey #sukeyio :)

How now, brown cow?

Where did Sukey come from?

It was dubbed 'the anti-kettling app' and received international media attention in 2011. It attempts to keep people safe mobile and informed during a demonstration. We achieve this by promoting collaboration between people on the demo that are using Sukey, and people not at the demo via social networking, to share reports and observations which can be independently verified by a team inside and outside the demo (some are on the ground) and then broadcast back to the entire crowd. We believe  in information for information's sake and try to introduce as little 'editorial bias' in rebroadcasting as possible. We also produced a map showing where the police were kettling protestors so that people had a better sense of what was going on.

Where are we going?

The information flows are now more dynamic and interesting as we enter into the 3rd generation of the app and we can now engage thousands of people from all around the world who may just simply watching the demo at home or from work, using social media or live-streams, to help the people on the ground by preforming 'mechanical-turk-esque' micro tasks. These are small digital tasks which may involve adding or correcting waypoints on a map, taking photos (on the ground), rating a photo, tagging a photo, doing a google search, voting on the perceived veracity of a piece of information or looking on google street view to help find things. This is all very exciting and I would ask those interested to get in touch to help us BETA. Email: sukey.org@gmail.com twitter: @sukeyio

Connecting People

It is really interesting and important to connect people at a given demonstation with people not at the demonstration and give a 'loose-knit collective of clicktivists' something to do in order to help the demonstrators in a tangible way. This will lead to compelling stories of collaboration between people from all over the world who identify with the struggle of fellow people from other countries who are being silenced, coerced and beaten for peacefully protesting against their states. Even better when these stories are received and read by the people that were helped, then those in the countries that were helped will turn around and return the favour when the time comes. So we want to be the first group to really pay it forwards and start helping people to stay well informed at demonstrations and see if we can start a trend which will help all people collaborate to facilitate peaceful protest in this digital age.

Saturday, 6 October 2012

What is Sukey?

People that study technology often fail to remember to study people. Folks get so wrapped up and enamoured with the data, and so alienated from the people doing the work that human practice often gets ignored. Re-inscribing the "human" into technology is extremely important...lest we fall into the trap of "there is no alternative."
The Sukey project speaks to a number of theoretical problems with which we grapple when thinking about technology: the agency of software, the production of space, the possibility of reconfiguring existing capitalist technologies for purposes of resistance, and community organizing through emerging media channels. Sukey is also inherently geographic and does work to expose the often largely invisible tactics of the state to dominate spaces of protest.
So it appears that the Sukey app and our team are sort of a unique case.
When we bemoan and lament technology's role in oppression and governmental regimes, the question we often ask ourselves is, "How could this be done 'differently'?"  Some may ask the same question regarding geoweb technology: "What could be done to make geoweb applications more egalitarian?  You make it sound as though capital domination is a foregone conclusion." The first step toward changing that is imagining a different possibility.
I was recently told by a friend that Sukey is regarded by some as a counter-example to "the corporate-state nexus owns and manipulates social media and other technology" in the geoweb field. Thanks guys!
Source: Adapted from an Email from Josef Eckert

Friday, 5 October 2012

Sukey.io helps you have fun during the protests and, on the way, keep each other safe, mobile and informed.

This is just a teaser of sukey.io. ALPHA release soon...


Sukey.io helps you have fun during the protests and, on the way, keep each other safe, mobile and informed.

This leaves no trace since the micro-app list is temporary and set by Sukey servers.

Micro-apps are frequently updated and change based on your location so keep checking Sukey.io during the protest to see what's new!

Get in touch if you want to help us test the ALPHA release.

Sukey.io is proudly agpl-3.0