Panic Button: Lessons for the Tech-for-Good Sector

  • This was a design-by-committee project that didn't have a clear singular problem it was trying to solve. Reading their goals they intentionally mixed the simple aspect of a "911" for human rights workers with a mishmash engagement-type soft goals.

    Just looks like a recipe for failure regardless of funding.

    Another way to look at it, it was a success if measured in terms of raising awareness of the problem.

  • "Despite our best efforts, we have not been able to secure any substantial external funding for the project since being awarded £100,000 as runners-up in the Google Global Impact Award in June 2013. In part, this is due to what in hindsight was a short-lived boom in funding and excitement around “tech 4 good.”"

    There's a lesson here somewhere for those who are optimistic about changing the world.

  • I really appreciate it when people produce thoughtful looks at project failure like this. If I had Too Much Money, I'd definitely fund an annual prize for the best startup-ish project failure reports. There's no better source for information on advancing the state of the field, but so much is lost when companies just quietly shut down.

  • Open source : https://github.com/PanicInitiative/PanicButton

    Donc si c'est vraiment utile, ca ne disparaitra peut etre pas

  • Also to note is that organisations like Amnesty are incredibly inefficient and big money wasters. Paying mid level employees 5000k net + 2000 for rent is not exceptional. So I'm skeptic when they need "more money".

  • When it said:

    > help us use technology to prevent unlawful detentions

    I thought they were talking about the Firefox Extension called Panic Button from ~10 years ago that we used in school to hide games and show an education site 'Preventing detentions'!

  • I don't get it. The reasons they give are:

    1) Only had £100,000

    2) Would need more money to make the app deal with false alerts.

    3) Would need more money to "keep up [...] our engagement with users."

    What does this mean?

  • The followup article has much more useful detail: https://www.theengineroom.org/panic-button-lessons-learned/