Kenyan Chief Foils Robbery Via Twitter 50
PolygamousRanchKid writes with this quote from CNN:
"A Kenyan chief in a town far from the bustling capital foiled a predawn robbery recently using Twitter, highlighting the far-reaching effects of social media in areas that don't have access to the Internet. Chief Francis Kariuki said he got a call in the dead of the night that thieves had broken into a neighbor's house. Local residents, who subscribe to his tweets through a free text messaging service, jumped into action. They surrounded the house, sending the thugs fleeing into the night. In the town 100 miles from Nairobi, a majority of residents don't have access to computers, the Internet or smart phones. The sporadic cyber cafes strewn across the landscape charge for Internet access. However, almost every household has a cell phone and text messages are a major form of communication in the nation."
M.O. (Score:5, Funny)
"They tried to steal our filing cabinet of birth certificates!"
Your assistance is requested (Score:3, Funny)
He now needs your help moving the town's valuables out of the country, and would be willing to offer you 10% of the value as long as you deposit a cashier's check and make a western union transfer. God bless you.
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Wrong side of the continent...
What? Did you think the US was the only thing in the universe with two coasts?
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Wrong side of the continent...
What? Did you think the US was the only thing in the universe with two coasts?
Yeah, but Africa is so small. Only 6 letters. Also Africa is about the size of Greenland, as irrefutably proven by this map [mapsofworld.com]. And Greenland has only about 50k [wikipedia.org] people. That's how small Africa is, and so stuff like "which coast" is rather irrelevant.
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Yeah, good old Mercator [wikipedia.org]. Distorting world view of "Westerners" since 16th century, even if it has some nice properties, which make it favourite choice of services like Google Maps even today.
But I hope, perhaps in vain, that anybody reading /. has at least vague understanding of the subject, considering how relevant it is today, with all the online maps around.
Two Crimes Committed (Score:5, Informative)
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I would think there are more cell phones than toilets every country. Cell phones are generally a 1:1 thing and toilets a 1:Many.
Not really. Most households in the developed world, will have two or more toilets nowadays, but there's also toilets in workplaces, and public toilets.
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Yes, but never more toilets than people, and not usually in the lower-class either.
It's easy to imagine 4-6 people with a single toilet at home, yet most of them having cell-phones.
In many poorer places, the elderly live with their children, so no extra toilet there.
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Re:Two Crimes Committed (Score:4, Interesting)
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Also, the Guardian article makes clear something that was not clear from your previous post: that this is not - at least on the face of it - just a conspiracy by western cellphone makers to stop Africans from getting cheap cellphones: "Under European law, equipment which is still functioning
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"Well, prosecutions and seizures are a good thing if the people really were cut-rate recyclers using damaging, illegal reclamation processes, unapproved dumps, and/or child labor. This is an actual, documented problem.'
Yes. IF. Here is a slashdot article http://hardware.slashdot.org/story/12/02/12/1431208/its-not-all-waste-the-complicated-life-of-surplus-electronics-in-africa [slashdot.org] showing the actual documentation of the actual trade in Africa during the time the African in the Guardian article was accused o
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What kind of demented post is this? (Score:4, Informative)
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used cell phones were imported and hacked/jailbroken
If they're mostly imported from Europe, they shouldn't need to jailbreak them - especially non-smartphones, which seems to be the bulk of devices in Africa.
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Locked phones do exist here. Especially dumbphones.
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I'm just waiting for someone to post a picture of a portaloo built from broken mobile phones ...
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used cell phones were imported and hacked/jailbroken, which created enough subscribers for private sector companies to erect the towers
Doesn't seem to make sense, why would someone import and hack a cellphone into a country with no towers? There is no reason to spend time and resources doing this, if the phones won't work. A few individuals may have done this for their own purposes, but you would never have enough people carrying around useless cellphones, that a company would then say, "hey, let's build a tower/network"
N.B. As I was actually living in an African country when cellphones were introduced, I happen to know that it was private
Who's Fault? (Score:5, Funny)
Oh please, people, these "burglars" are clearly "White Hat" and were simply penetration testing. Is it their fault the homestead was so easy to break into? The owner should be grateful and offer these Security Researchers a job watching their house.
I can relate (Score:5, Funny)
Local residents, who subscribe to his tweets through a free text messaging service, jumped into action. They surrounded the house, sending the thugs fleeing into the night.
Yeah, whenever I've tried spending any time following someone on Twitter - I usually end up fleeing into the night as well.
You can only take so much rambling about being unable to pop a pimple or photos of what they've eaten...
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Then find someone else to follow.
Still, it seems most of the tech heads are moving to G+...
Africans know the meaning of mob justice (Score:2)
This story brought to you by Twitter PR service (Score:3, Interesting)
Actually (Score:2)
Surprised the robbers got away (Score:2, Funny)
I'm guessing the chase scene looked like the New York City Marathon!
Communication in Africa, not just in Kenya (Score:3, Interesting)
...text messages are a major form of communication in the nation."
After vacationing in South Africa two years ago I'd claim that mobile phones aren't just a major form of communication in Kenya, but in all of sub-Saharan Africa.
Rent a car, give them your mobile number; when you return it in you'll get a text confirming that they got it. Even if you handed the keys to someone in person and got a receipt, you'll still get a text. When you check out of your hotel you get a text. Etc., etc.
Pretty much anything you do, if you gave them your mobile number, you'll get a text of some kind. And South Africa is unquestionably pretty advanced compared to much of the rest of Africa.
Altruistic flash mob (Score:3)
Twitter might be good in some cases, (Score:3)
... but it might get you killed [in-other-news.com] in others.
"Useful twitter?" (Score:2)
Are you dense? (Score:4, Interesting)
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Yes but if these thieves had a rifle it would of been a dead neighborhood watch.
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Why do you think the locals don't have rifles? This photo [wikipedia.org] is from Kenya...
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Untold conclusion to story (Score:1)
I've lived in Kenyan. What this story leaves out that is when the community catches someone burgling a house they very often end up beating/hacking to death with a shovel the thief. I can assure you this did not end well for the thief.
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In a state with inadequate law enforcement, this is kind of inevitable... Turning them over to the authorities would probably just mean a bribe and a quick release with hardly a slap on the wrist. I assume that this would be the state in rural Kenya.
Forgive me if I don't have too much sympathy, though. I'm sure that's part of the understood cost of doing (nocturnal) business in that place...
Dialog: (Score:3)
Community:"A little birdie told us."
Cell phones are computers... (Score:3)
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"With text messaging, literacy is promoted."
?
OMG WTF
Two sides (Score:1)