Security and safety could be improved if
researchers from very disparate disciplines -- humanities, computer
science and politics -- were to work together, according to research
described in the International Journal of Emergency Management.
Moreover, such coordinated efforts online would improve crisis
management during natural disasters, terrorist attack or cyber warfare.
Jean-Luc Wybo and colleagues explain how social media and online
social networking technologies have emerged as powerful tools to
exchange information among a large variety of players, including the
public, authorities, companies and journalists. They suggest that both
security and safety involve detection of problems, and the employment of
efficient procedures and plans to reduce or remove threats and to
protect people and assets at risk.
The team has reviewed examples of how online social networking is
used during emergencies and crises and investigated how relevant and
useful information is extracted in an effort to support the response.
They suggest that the security forces, the emergency services and those
fighting cybercrime could all benefit more from the integration of
social media into their organisations. In their paper, the researchers
also reveal the technical limitations of social media and how it can be
abused.
Whether earthquake, tsunami, rail disaster or suicide bombing. From
Haiti to Mumbai, from the Brooklyn River to Boston, through the Arab
Spring and most recently the Erawan Shrine in Bangkok, social media
sites such as Twitter and Facebook have revealed the first images and
video footage of events. They can offer a way for people to communicate
when conventional channels are blocked either deliberately or through
infrastructure collapse. The researchers describe how the use of social
media during emergencies and disasters can be classified broadly into
two categories: a passive use for the dissemination of information and
to receive feedback from users and a systematic usage through which
emergency communications can be carried out, warnings issued, activity
monitored and damage assessed.
With more than 3.2 billion people estimated to now have internet
access, around 1.5 billion active Facebook users and more than 300
million Twitter users, there is great potential for improving
communications and responses during crises. "Providing threatened
populations with early warnings is a government's mission for which
social media should provide a strong support," the team reports. Social
media can act as both the monitoring tools and the alert system during
crises. The skills and techniques of computer, social, and political
science, should now be brought together to policymakers, governments,
emergency responders and the public improved knowledge of how these
tools might best be used for all our benefit.
Source: International Journal of Emergency Management, 2015; 11 (2): 105 DOI: 10.1504/IJEM.2015.071045
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