Smiling Young White People Make App for Avoiding Black Neighborhoods
Beloveds, I read this article, and decided against posting it. You know I'm working on NOT being so good at seeing the negative in society. And definately, not infecting your sweet clear thinking, with more disheartening Knewz....But then today, I ran across a follow-up article on this topic, from another source. So here are both of them.
File this one in: The Way Some People Think folder. I responded to the second article, from my HrtSmiles identity. It's included below.
lovu~Kendke
Valley Wag
Is there any way to keep white people
from using computers, before this whole planet is ruined? I ask because
the two enterprising white entrepreneurs above just made yet another app for avoiding non-white areas of your town—and it's really taking off!
Crain's reports on SketchFactor, a racist app
made for avoiding "sketchy" neighborhoods, which is the term young
white people use to describe places where they don't feel safe because
they watched all five seasons of The Wire:
SketchFactor, the brainchild of co-founders Allison McGuire and Daniel Herrington, is a Manhattan-based navigation app that crowdsources user experiences along with publicly available data to rate the relative "sketchiness" of certain areas in major cities. The app will launch on the iTunes on Friday, capping off a big week for the startup, which was named as a finalist in the NYC BigApps competition.According to Ms. McGuire, a Los Angeles native who lives in the West Village, the impetus behind SketchFactor was her experience as a young woman navigating the streets of Washington, D.C., where she worked at a nonprofit.[...]After meeting Mr. Herrington, an electrical engineer who was taken with the SketchFactor idea, the two quit their Washington D.C.-based jobs and decamped to New York City with funding from family and friends.As one of the finalists in the BigApps competition, SketchFactor is poised to receive more attention when it launches.
With firsthand experience living in Washington, D.C., where white
terror is as ubiquitous as tucked-in polo shirts, grinning caucasians Allison McGuire and Daniel Herrington should be unstoppable in the field of smartphone race-baiting—they're already finalists in a $20,000 startup contest! But don't worry: they're not racist. It says so right on their blog, which asks people to share "sketchy" stories about strangers they spot:
Who we're not: racists, bigots, sexists. Any discriminatory posts will be deleted.
Oh, well in that case. The app launches tomorrow, so it's probably safest to just stay indoors until then.
To contact the author of this post, write to biddle@gawker.com
SketchFactor Lost Its Anti-Racial Profiling 'Partner' as Soon as It Launched
Arit John Atlantic Media/TechnologyAugust 15, 2014
Last week Allison McGuire and Daniel Herrington, two white millennials, unveiled SketchFactor, a crowdsourced app that lets people identify (and avoid) places where "sketchy" events have occurred, depending on one's potentially racist idea of what is or isn't sketchy. But when the controversial app was first announced, there was one promising detail that made it seem like this app might not fall into the same trap as its predecessors: its "partnership" with Million Hoodies Movement for Justice, an anti-racial profiling group formed in the wake of the Trayvon Martin shooting. The partnership was promoted on the front page of the SketchFactor website.
But according to Million Hoodies' Deputy Director Dante Berry, that partnership never existed. "We never supported the app," Berry told The Wire this week. Million Hoodies supported the idea of a technology that could be used to document incidences of racial profiling, but he said "we were never partners, and we're not partners."
In fact, Berry said he first realized SketchFactor was claiming the partnership last Thursday, a day before the app launched, while he was on a conference call with SketchFactor co-founder Allison McGuire and The Wire. When The Wire asked Berry this week when he'd learned that SketchFactor has listed Million Hoodies as a partner on its website, he said "right after that call."
During the call, the partnership was mentioned several times and uncontested by Berry, but now all references to Million Hoodies have been removed from the site at the organization's request. SketchFactor also declined to confirm or deny Berry's statements. McGuire said she had no comment when asked about Million Hoodies distancing itself from SketchFactor over the phone.
SkecthFactor was created with good intentions
SketchFactor gained immediate infamy last week after a Crain's New York Business profile depicted McGuire and her co-founder, Daniel Herrington, as smiling, if not oblivious and tone deaf, white millennials. It was panned by several media outlets, though McGuire noted that the press from outlets that interviewed her had been good."This is not an app that's created for one type of person to report one type of thing," she said during the conference call. "There's a reason we're called SketchFactor. Everyone experiences sketchiness. We're not SafetyFactor. We're not AvoidBlackPeopleFactor."
Here's how the app works — users document an incident and describe various aspects of sketchiness including:
- Its SketchFactor, ranked 1-5
- Whether you're submitting a "pro-tip," "weird" incident, "dangerous" incident, or "something else"
- How well lit the area was
- What time of day the incident occurred
- Whether it happened "just now" (within the last hour), "recently" (within the last two weeks), or "a long time ago" (within the last year)
- A description of the sketchy incident
During the call, at least, Berry seemed to be on the same page. "It's a way for marginalized communities, and also everyone else, to really talk about the experiences that people go through every day and providing the context," he said. "On our end we're really framing it in a way of how can we create a more safe community for all of us, not just a select few."
But after the conference call, Berry sent a press release to The Wire from Million Hoodies distancing the organization from SketchFactor. According to the release, while Million Hoodies doesn't "object to trying and testing any potential technology that can help empower communities" (emphasis added):
We do not support nor have we ever supported the language or description of "sketchy" or "sketchfactor" but continued to explore working with the team to possibly license the technology that powered a tool we thought could be useful. As we worked to explore this possibility through a partnership, SketchFactor launched suddenly to the public without any further lead time.Million Hoodies now says it was solely a beta tester, though Berry said that he hasn't used the app since it was released and didn't want to comment on the quality of the app now.
The real problem with the app
Berry hasn't used the app since it launched, but we have. And while most the of the backlash against the app has been that it's racist, the truth is it's just spammy. For example:"So for example, I didn't know this, and I have been sexually assaulted, I didn't know that after one of those incidences occurs, you should not smoke a cigarette, chew gum, change, shower, etc," McGuire said.
The problem is that despite good intentions, one app can't be all things to all people. As McGuire put it, "there's a reason that I find something sketchy and and reason Dante (Berry) finds something sketchy. And everyone cares about sketchiness, it's not a white people problem."
Yes, everyone cares about "sketchiness," even if, like Million Hoodies, that's not the word you'd use. That's why Million Hoodies has looked for apps that allow marginalized communities to document incidences of police misconduct and racial profiling, and why some white people think sites like Ghetto Tracker aka Nice Part of Town are a good idea. But when you try to combine those concerns under the umbrella of a charged word like "sketchy" it doesn't work.
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