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Joyce Barnathan, Technology Transfer Tools - ICFJ, 11 June
1. Why
Think
South-‐to-‐South
Technology
Transfer
Tools
–
International
Center
for
Journalists
InfoAmazonia
–
Uses
satellite
and
other
public
data
to
map
environmental
degradation,
making
it
easy
for
journalists
to
detect
problems
such
as
deforestation
and
pollution.
This
technology
was
then
used
for
the
3
following
projects.
Oxpeckers
–
Tracks
poachers
in
protected
wildlife
regions
in
Southern
Africa.
Land
Quest
–
Maps
oil
and
water
interests
and
what
is
happening
to
profits
from
these
investments
in
Kenya.
EKUATORIAL
–
Maps
degradation
of
oceans,
forest
fires
and
other
problems
in
Indonesia.
Shu
Choudhary’s
Mobile
News
Service
is
powered
by
trained
citizen
journalists,
who
provide
news
for
the
first
time
in
the
local
language
to
communities
in
a
remote
region
of
India.
IVR
Junction
–
IVR
Junction
developed
on
Shu
Choudhary’s
original
mobile
news
service
which
brought
reports
by
trained
citizen
journalists
to
poor
and
isolated
tribal
communities.
IVR
expands
on
the
original
idea
by
linking
these
stories
to
social
media
platforms
such
as
Facebook,
YouTube
and
Twitter.
Periodistas
En
Riesgo/Journalists
at
Risk
–
Uses
crowd-‐sourcing
to
map
threats
and
attacks
against
journalists
in
Mexico
Manual
De
Seguridad
Digital
y
Móvil/Manual
of
Digital
and
Mobile
Security
–
An
online
handbook
in
Spanish
on
digital
security
for
journalists
written
by
Knights
Fellowship
Director
Jorge
Luis
Sierra.
Iraqi
Journalists
Rights
Defense
Association
–
Inspired
by
the
interactive
map
tracking
attacks
on
journalists
in
Mexico
created
by
Jorge
Luis
Sierra.
And
in
a
new
program,
Sierra
and
ICFJ
will
help
Iraqi
journalists
develop
a
database
of
threats
against
freedom
of
expression
and
expand
the
map
to
visually
display
this
data.
2.
Code
for
Africa
–
Developed
in
Kenya
and
expanded
to
South
Africa,
Ghana
and
Nigeria,
this
movement
embeds
technologists
into
newsrooms
to
train
journalists
how
to
mine
and
visualize
data
for
stories.
They
also
help
the
news
organizations
design
mobile
apps
that
expand
access
to
news.
Investigative
Dashboard
&
Secure
Reporter
–
The
Dashboard
allows
journalists
with
limited
data
skills
to
easily
mine
databases
or
seek
help
from
data
experts,
while
ICFJ
developed
the
Secure
Reporter
platform
so
that
journalists
can
share
information
across
borders
without
fear
of
hackers,
backed
by
hostile
drug
lords
or
repressive
governments,
gaining
access
to
it.
While
Investigative
Dashboard
&
Secure
Reporter
were
developed
during
programs
in
Eastern
Europe,
we
have
translated
the
tools
into
Spanish,
and
hired
a
data
researcher
to
work
with
Latin
American
investigative
reporters.
GotToVote
–
Developed
through
Code
for
Africa,
the
technologists
used
government
data
to
build
a
website
that
gave
Kenyans
information
on
how
and
where
to
register
to
vote.
Hackdash
–
Based
upon
the
Code
for
Africa
movement,
Knight
Fellow
Mariano
Blejman
developed
Hackdash,
a
free
and
open
source
platform
that
lets
Hackathon
organizers
better
manage
new
ideas.
This
tool
is
being
used
from
Finland
to
Nepal,
from
the
U.S.
to
Uruguay.
Chicas
Poderosas
–
Founded
by
Knight
Fellow
Mariana
Santos,
Chicas
Poderosas,
aims
to
get
Latin
American
women
involved
in
media
technology.