Friday, December 25, 2009

can radian6 be used to prevent suicides and murders?

September 15, 2009 by Jonathan Nguyen · Comments 

Radian6i’ve been thinking lately that we could potentially use social media monitoring tools to prevent suicides and mass murders. the idea struck me as i was working with some clients on a couple of issues / crisis management projects lately.

in the midst of the hurley burley of crisis mode, a news story caught my eye­. killer george sodini went berserk in a pennsylvania gym and killed three, wounding nine before turning the gun on himself. the thing about it is, he blogged about doing it. that’s when the idea sparked.

so i did some digging

it’s not the first time, that social media was used by a killer or a suicide victim to declare their intentions. with a quick search, i found paul zolezzi, a model who declared he was going to kill himself on facebook and did. more interestingly though, i found hsu yu-sheng.

hsu yu-sheng

hsu is a gay and lesbian rights activist in taiwan, who on august 6 wrote a farewell note on his blog in english. After seeing the note, readers of his blog, launched a full scale effort to save him. friends and strangers alike, thousands of people banded together, to try to track him down and others posted kind comments to his blog.

police arrived at hsu’s place just in time and saved his life.

the idea

we use social media monitoring tools such as radian6 to listen to conversations on the blogosphere and elsewhere to protect brands. it’s not a stretch to deploy these tools to protect people.

how it would work

  1. radian6 set up to listen for a list of keywords
  2. suspect posts are parsed through to a heuristic analysis engine to further determine the sentiment of the post. radian6 is has a automatic sentiment engine built in, but we need one that would be tuned to suicidal/homicidal sentiments
  3. results that come up positive there are alerted to the on duty psychiatrist for an assessment and to alert the relevant authorities

there would be many issues that would have to be dealt with to make the system viable, feasible and workable and even then it would never be a certainty. what it would be is another tool in kitbag to tackle an extremely complex and difficult problem.

this post was first published on the howorth blog

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  • SarahMoran
    This idea has merit and has crossed my mind a few times too. I think most organisations that currently look at suicide prevention lack the capacity to even understand this technology, let alone apply it. Would be scope to partner though, if radian6 could donate the technology to an organisation that could become capable if they had access to it.

    I volunteer for Reachout.com and we have used technology to help young people, initially through the website but also with forums... I would also like to see targeted ads to at risk people - though I'm not familiar enough with keyword capabilities for targeting, one day I hope this would be possible with Facebook. If you right "trigger" words, an ad comes up to direct you to some help in an online environment.

    It's all so new and non-profits are often starved of information when it comes to technology - but if you are keen to make this more than an idea I'd love to share thoughts...
  • Hi Sarah, Radian6 saw my post and made an offer to help. Let's have a chat about this offline. I'll shoot you through an email.
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