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Pivot 25: East Africa's Mobile Tech Event [Video]

I'm really excited to showcase a new video on the East African mobile phone tech scene.  We're launching the inaugural Pivot 25 startup competition and conference on June 14-15th this year.  All proceeds to support the m:lab, an incubation space for mobile startups in the region. 

Here's our promo video:

PIVOT25: East Africa's Biggest Mobile Tech Event from Pivot25 Conference on Vimeo.

25 startup companies from Uganda, Kenya, Tanzania and Rwanda will pitch their application or service on the stage to investors, businesses and media.  These pitching sessions are broken down into the following 5 categories:

This is your chance to see "What's Next" in East Africa's mobile space, the region of Africa (and the world) where some of the best innovation in mobiles is coming from. 

Join us!

Erik Hersman

iHub | Ushahidi | WhiteAfrican | AfriGadget

Filed under  //   Africa   Conference   Nairobi   kenya   mobile   technology  
Posted by whiteafrican 

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Join the Cult of the Crowd

Over the year and half working on the SwiftRiver project, I've thought a lot about the subject of crowdsourcing. Not so much the how, but the how. (I suppose the pseudo-science of crowdsourcing would be a fitting subtitle.) Partly because it's part of my job to help prevent 'the gaming of the system' within Ushahidi deployments, but partly because it's become a subject I'm obsessed with.

So rather than continue to force my wife to listen to all my thoughts and observations, I've started an audio podcast and blog called Cult of the Crowd. One of my favorite blogs is Kevin Kelly's blog The Technium which is sort of like a living book, and so COTC takes that format with lengthy posts and video versions which I also hope will be later combined into a book.

crowdsourcing

The subject certainly includes collaborative or activist mapping, but it also includes participatory journalism, distributed labor and micro-tasking which the podcast will also discuss in depth. The first episode is up now, you can watch it above or at cultofthecrowd.com. Obviously Ushahidi will be covered quite a bit but so will other companies that heavily rely upon crowds and crowdsourcing in their work.

 

Join the Cult of the Crowd Community

 

Follow us on Twitter - @cultofthecrowd
Join the Community - grou.ps/cultofthecrowd

Filed under  //   book   crowd   crowdsourcing   cult   gosier   jon   technology  
Posted by Jon Gosier 

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One day, hundreds of stories| Featuring TED Translator Nafissa Yakubova and TED Fellow Andriankoto Ratozamanana | Reportage

One year from today, on November 11, 2011 people all over the world will be brought together by film in the 11Eleven Project. Carly Goldstone reports.
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Image: Danielle Lauren via facebook.com

11Eleven project director, Danielle Lauren wants people to tell their stories through film.

How much do we really have in common and how could we possibly find out? Is there potential to generate one world voice?

It’s a big ask, but a band of determined people from around the planet are planning to give it a go. A year from now, on the eleventh day, of the eleventh month, of the 2011th year, those who have access to film, video, digital, phone, web camera or microphone will be encouraged to begin a universal narrative.

Danielle Lauren, a documentary filmmaker from Sydney, Australia, is the creator and director of the 11Eleven Project.

“[I'm] trying to bring the world together as one on this auspicious day.”

Individuals from 196 different countries, including Australia, Fiji, Thailand, Belarus, Spain and Nigeria, communicated to in over 2000 languages, will be invited to “capture a day in the life of their world.”

Participants will be able to upload their footage, audio or photographic material to the 11Eleven Project website which will be collated and turned into a variety of different projects, highlighting the 24 hours captured by the world.

Lauren also plans to make a two-hour feature length documentary, to explore human experiences, the similarities and polarity between people across the globe.

“This project will break boundaries between people and create a sense of one world. Let me see you as an equal and let me explore how you live your life, the good and the bad, and let me take some of that knowledge and translate it into my own life.”

Lauren devised the project to “illustrate the commonalities amongst all people and to witness the shared experience amongst every human being living on earth.”

The 11Eleven Project highlights the powerful role that an individual can play, day-to-day.

“The individual can make a difference in the world and the power of the collective can change the planet,” Lauren said.

Harinjaka Ratozamanana, a citizen journalist/blogger and 11ELEVEN project manager for Madagascar, is busy networking and helping produce films, pictures and stories for the project.

“With humility and modesty, I want to put Madagascar on the map through this historical and unique project.

“Sadly, the world of film in Madagascar is very poor, we have very few film production companies throughout the island,” he said.

Ratozamanana said he became involved in the project because he loves the idea of telling stories.

“Danielle Lauren gives us hope and the opportunity to be part of this international and meaningful project and help us show our smile in this time capsule.

“Often biodiversity and lemurs are in the spotlight, [I want to] focus on the Malagasy people and make them crucial actors and models in their unique and threatened environment,” said Ratozamanana.

“Malagasy people favour unity, solidarity and community life and their consequences such as hospitality, sharing and reconciliation. In fact, we believe that humanity is one.”

Nafissa Yakubova is originally from Kazakhstan and is now a medical student in the US.

She hopes to capture stories about minority village children on November 11 next year.

“I plan to use my camera and skills for those children who can’t afford to be involved in this worldwide project. I would love to capture their lives in a day.

“I’m very inspired by the idea of bringing people together, especially through art…[it] reminds us of the simplicity and beauty of being a human, and how we can come together.”

Yakubova said she was also extremely moved by the emphasis of telling stories in multiple languages.

However, Lauren said language barriers is currently one of the hurdles.

“Trying to find like-minded people to be ambassadors in their own countries and help promote and participate in the project, is the biggest challenge.”

Lauren is currently focused on ensuring areas with limited access to technology can still participate in the project.

“I want to make sure that people with limited access to technology get to participate and ensure that the global narrative is not an English narrative.”

As this is a non-profit project, Lauren says she will use the profits to provide money for charities that are helping to achieve the UN Millennium Development Goals.

Partners of the project include: Sydney International Film School; UC Santa Cruz, California; Florence Film School and University of the Philippines Film Institute.

 

via reportageonline.com

The best place for people to stay updated on 11/11/11 is via facebook

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TED Fellow Andriankoto via facebook.com

 

Filed under  //   Antananarivo   Madagascar   TED   TED Fellow   technology  

TED Fellow Andriankoto : Challenges of using technology to cover the Gabon elections | CPJ.org

Libreville

Mobile phone add in Libreville _ featuring the Singer Magic System

Gabon’s bloggers struggle to take hold

It’s been a couple of weeks since I left Gabon, and a month since elections to pick a successor to Omar Bongo, who ruled Africa’s fourth-largest oil producer for 41 years. There are unresolved questions about the ballot count and the number of people killed in post-election violence. 

Riot police confront journalists in Libreville during an August opposition protest. (Andriankoto Ratozamanana)
Riot police confront journalists in Libreville during an August opposition protest. (Andriankoto Ratozamanana)
Until this summer, I did not know much about Gabon, except for a random tidbit—that the nation of 1.4 million had a GDP matching Portugal. Things changed after July 3 when Lova Rakotomalala and I, both bloggers from Madagascar, received an e-mail from Alice Backer, a former French editor of Global Voices Lingua, about covering Gabon’s presidential elections scheduled for August 30.

 

I accepted because I need fresh air. After all, as a citizen blogger of Global Voices teny Malagasy, I had already experienced covering the bitter political crisis tearing apart my Indian Ocean island of Madagascar. With crisis reporting platform Foko-ushahidi, which allowed ordinary citizens to send testimonies via SMS, real-time reporting on Twitter, and local Web sites such as Topmada, Lova, myself and other citizen journalists helped cover all sides of the unfolding crisis. Citizen media reports were even quoted by international media as the Malagasy media was divided into partisan political positions.

Gabon, on the other hand, is not known as a “wired” country in tech speak. Less than 6 percent of the population has access to the Internet, according to InternetWorldStats. While intense public outcry opposed our former president’s closure of rival’s TV station and eventually led to his toppling from power, government censorship of media appeared to be the accepted norm in Gabon for many years, according to press freedom organizations.

Nevertheless, as I left the winter-season cool temperatures of Madagascar for the hot and humid air of Gabon’s seaside capital of Libreville, just above the Equator, I knew the elections would be historic, if not for the unprecedented role of new media technologies.

Twenty-three candidates were contesting the elections, many with appealing campaign Web sites such as Ali9, Mamboundou, AndreMbaObame or Moubamba. Candidates were also aggressively campaigning on social networking sites. One of the candidates for instance, Franco-Gabonese journalist Bruno Ben Moumbamba, was among the most active on Facebook, Flickr, YouTube and Twitter. Ali Ben Bongo, the ruling party candidate, even distinguished his campaign by sending on two separate occasions a personal SMS message to the customers of Gabon’s three main mobile carriers, Zain, Libertis, and Moov.

In the many bars (commonly called “makis”) of downtown Libreville’s Louis district, people discussed everything around the local beer “Regab” and braised fish dishes. With Bongo’s monopoly of state media, most local radio stations oriented toward religious and entertainment programming, and a handful of partisan TV stations controlled by the elite in politics, business, and the clergy, most Gabonese turned to international media for objective news. Unfortunately, the print and broadcast media’s coverage of the elections was limited by censorship, intimidation, and violence against reporters.

When I arrived in Libreville, I quickly detected that people were reluctant to freely express their views in public to someone they do not know. Even the barber I went to for a haircut politely declined to share his views on the elections, when I put the question to him as the TV in his salon was blaring Africa 24’s coverage of the polls. Bizarre.

At first, many young people I met did not seem very interested in the Internet. In fact, the most educated told me they used the Web exclusively to check e-mail and visit chat or dating sites. Others appeared motivated by the idea of blogging, but wanted to be paid to do it. Nevertheless, with help, a few people took their first steps in using the Web as social media, and a handful of new citizen voices slowly emerged. Journalist and activist Gaston Asséko shared his experience on voting day on YouTube. Roger Edima Mavoungou Wilson, a communications professional, started a blog and is actively tweeting. Régis Ngoma, a local comedian, even started a YouTube channel with videos satirizing the elections.

Regardless, there were many difficulties in my reporting. I remember being unable to text after the mobile companies suspended SMS service during the elections. As a result, a crisis reporting platform deployed by a Gabonese diaspora movement based in France called The Guardian Angels of Gabon on Ushahidi never took off. Nevertheless, social media facilitated the flow of information between the Gabonese diaspora and those living home. “#Gabon” even jumped to the top tag on francophone Twitter following the announcement of elections results, according to Twirus.

Doubts persist over the results of the presidential elections and with a recount of the votes in progress, journalists are still under pressure. Just last weekend, local caricaturist and blogger Patrick Essono was detained for drawing a cartoon of two policemen. A day before, the editor of state daily L’Union, Albert Yangari, was detained for questioning after publishing interviews with residents of Port-Gentil that suggested more people had been killed in post-election violence than reported by the government. This week, there were reports that the house of Jonas Moulenda, the journalist who carried out the interviews, was searched by security agents, and that he has received death threats.

Andriankoto Harinajaka Ratozamanana, is TED 2009 Fellow

he is co-founder of the Foko Blog Club, which trains Malagasy citizens in citizen journalism. He blogs on Posterous

There is always something new out of Africa - Pliny the Elder (A.D.23-79)

 

Filed under  //   Africa   Andriankoto   Madagascar   TED   TED Fellow   activism   gabon   technology