Catch up with Old Friends and Respond to a Disaster, Just Message Me!
March 14th, 2011 Posted in INMED | No Comments »The tragedy from the earthquake and subsequent tsunami in Japan continues today as death tolls increase, threats of a secondary nuclear disaster is imminent, and entire village populations are unaccounted for. The images coming from Japan will forever be burned into my mind.
I remember being glued to the TV Friday morning as I watched the coverage of the earthquake and tsunami. I was watching a local Kansas City news station as it covered the disaster and its aftermath when the anchor of the show caught my attention. The anchor stated, “our reporting is from information we are receiving via Facebook, Twitter, and Text messages from Kansas City natives and others who are right now in Japan”. What??? Did I hear that correctly? The news and images we are receiving from Japan are from non-journalist reporting and sent information via social media. I was not only impressed by the source of information, but as I continued to listen and double check the information being received from social media sites I realized that the information was 1. Fairly reliable and 2. The information was in real-time.
The use of social media continues to expand beyond the “catching up with old friends” interaction to legitimate exchange of information. The question remains how do we access information and resources through social media to assist disaster victims and promote disaster recovery?
