Chirp Alert: a community approach to stop misinformation
Misinformation is a global challenge for our fast-paced society. With the upsurge in technology and social media use, there are growing channels for misinformation to spread. This results in uninformed decision making and amplifies existing societal insecurities.
In Kenya, it can be clearly seen in how misinformation fuels political violence near election periods. While the widespread presence of trustworthy and verified information can stunt the spread of misinformation, these resources are often an unaffordable commodity for lower-resourced communities. As a result, misinformation impacts these communities disproportionately, while having no trustworthy infrastructure in place that is accessible to citizens. Misinformation exacerbates existing societal insecurities and leaves communities feeling anxious and unsure of how to go about their day-to-day life.
Kenya is an extremely collectivist society, so people want to help and look out for each other, but the pervasive nature of misinformation limits this. By amplifying existing collectivist attitudes in Kenya, we hope to empower citizens with trustworthy and relevant information that can be used to make informed decisions.
We are developing a community platform with students and community leaders and innovators in Kisumu, Kenya that will give users timely, hyperlocal, and accurate current events information happening around them. Users of this android/IOS app will be able to view and report verified event information, that is powered by the wisdom of the crowd. The purpose of Chirp Alert is to bring information back to citizens so that informed action and decision-making can proceed.
After countless conversations with Kenyans and community leaders, it became clear that Chirp Alert, and community crowdsourced platforms in general will amplify existing strong community attitudes towards service and advocacy. This is reflected in our solution as well! Within the messaging feature, users can easily join local community groups and become more sustainably involved in their community. This also will serve as a great help for community groups that struggle with outreach and recruiting diverse members.
As said before, every aspect of our solution seeks to foster and elevate the rich collectivist environment that already exists in Kenya. A video walkthrough of our app can be seen here.
Our solution serves residents of Kisumu, Kenya and has the potential to support citizens with access to a smartphone in collectivist cities across the globe. Chirp Alert will empower users with information so that they feel safer, can make economically viable decisions, and feel more connected to their community.
The current systems in place to provide information to the public are not able to keep up with the exponential technological expansion in Subharahan Africa, and the resulting increase in misinformation. Entities like the government are facing internal issues like corruption, and therefore are not equipped to serve their constituents equitably. Lower resourced community members are frequently neglected and don’t feel as connected to their community.
Community is a central part of civic engagement, and it is at the heart of Chirp Alert. By giving users a direct way to contribute to community knowledge, residents have the agency to become more engaged in their communities. Our solution will empower citizens to make informed decisions that will result in safer, economically stable, and more connected communities.
Our team consists of two seniors at Penn State University who have been working on this for the past two years, a developer, and a network of students and community leaders in Kisumu. We are an interdisciplinary team that care about fostering more engaged communities, and see that as a solution to so many global issues, including misinformation. At Penn State, Sonika and Eric have been lucky enough to work with the Humanitarian Engineering and Social Entrepreneurship (HESE) program that is an incubator for social impact ventures that run out of Kisumu. Through this program and our initial field research trip last summer, we gained great connections and insights into the problem. We are currently planning to launch a beta version of Chirp Alert alongside our Kenyan partners so that we can start testing and refining our solution. This looks like co-creation of the UI/UX, as well as agreement on initial user base and key partners moving forward. The goal is to have Chirp Alert up and running, completely by our Kenyan partners as soon as possible. From the Penn State perspective, we are currently solidifying the founding team in Kisumu, Kenya and will continue to support the venture, but we recognize that in order for this to truly be a platform for Kenya, we need it to be run by those same community members.
- Help learners acquire key civic skills and knowledge, including how to assess credibility of information, engage across differences, understand one’s own agency, and engage with issues of power, privilege, and injustice.
- Kenya
- Prototype: A venture or organization building and testing its product, service, or business model, but which is not yet serving anyone
Over the course of two years, our team has developed a UI?UX prototype of our app, as well as an in-depth business model that details all future relationships and functions of our venture. We have conducted hundreds of stakehodler conversations, and will complete two field research trips in Kisumu, where we will establish partnerships, additional team members, as well as expanding our potential user base. Our protoype is currently being developed, and we will have a functioning MVP within the next couple of months. We have a strong network of students and community innovators in Kenya that have worked with us and are helping us test our current prototype and will spread our user base once the app is fully developed and can launch in the Google Play store.
As an international team, this challenge was really appealing to us because we are interested in getting feedback and resources on how our team can take the next step in moving our venture forward. MIT Solve is a renowned global competition that would be an invaluable resource for us in this prototype stage! On of our biggest struggles is how to effectively work with our Kenyan team to make sure they are adequately supported so that they can eventually run the venture. Additionally, our team would really appreciate advice on how to mitigate potential negative impacts of our platform, such as potential increases in vigilantism or misrepresentation of a user report.
- Human Capital (e.g. sourcing talent, board development)
- Legal or Regulatory Matters
- Monitoring & Evaluation (e.g. collecting/using data, measuring impact)
- Public Relations (e.g. branding/marketing strategy, social and global media)
- Technology (e.g. software or hardware, web development/design)