The mayor of LA just announced that the city's COVID-19 contract tracing program is being done in partnership with Citizen. If you don't know what Citizen is, you probably don't want to! But here's a short thread.
Citizen started as a "crime tracker" named Vigilante but it was immediately removed from the app store for "concerns centered around user safety"—namely, that it would encourage, yes, vigilantism. techcrunch.com/2016/11/02/con…
The app, which, at the time, aggregated both 911 calls and user-reported "crimes," including streaming live video, rebranded—and got $12 million in funding.

“The name has changed, but the mission has not,” said founder Andrew Frame.
techcrunch.com/2017/09/19/cit…
You know the next part of the story. Citizen joins apps like Nextdoor and Amazon Ring which promote bias and racism—all while these companies work closely in concert with police departments. vox.com/recode/2019/5/…
Citizen has tried very hard to convince people that it's like listening to a police scanner, calling it "empowering."

But the app would encourage people who were near reported incidents to go out document potential "crimes" in-progress. nytimes.com/2019/03/17/sty…
The "crime" reporting feature was temporarily removed after concerns about privacy, including how the app tracked and stored location-based data. Which seems extremely cool and normal for a company doing something very personal like contract tracing! theintercept.com/2020/03/02/cit…
To get a sense of what Citizen is all about, first watch this ad that the company produced when it was still named Vigilante—remember, the name has changed, but the "mission" is the same.

"There's a man following me... he's wearing a hoodie."
And just for fun, how about this totes adorable basketball game that Citizen set up with... the NYPD.

"We’re trying to humanize the app and trying to humanize the NYPD,” said Citizen community manager Dennis Prince Mapp.
rockawave.com/articles/they-…
Citizen made a contact-tracing application it tried to sell to cities but no one wanted to use it.

However, this story says the app has enough users in LA—about 1 million—to simply turn on the contact-tracing system it already built and see what happens. wired.com/story/health-o…
What could go wrong?

Here's today's announcement and a link to the release, I'm sure they're eager to hear your thoughts. lamayor.org/la-county-and-…

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More from @awalkerinLA

12 Jun
This week is the annual Congress of New Urbanism where thousands of New Urbanists™ are getting together (virtually) to talk about their vision for cities.

I looked at #CNU28 to see what they were talking about and based on the tweet, here's my best guess at the session titles.
Using a Pandemic That Killed 1,000 People Yesterday to Advance Your Pro-Density Argument
Completely Realistic Housing Designs For a Depression When Everyone Will Be Evicted
Read 12 tweets
26 Mar
Meet my mom (on the right).

She’s a mother to three, a grandmother to six, and probably in better shape than all of us.

This week, she tested positive for COVID-19.
She's okay—but she wants me to tell you her story to convince you to stay home.

Symptoms started on March 14. Temperature, but not alarmingly high, headache, slight cough. Here's what she said one night: "It feels like someone is stabbing my bones."

Her doctor wouldn't see her.
She called her county health department, who suggested she go to a drive-thru testing facility nearby.

After going all the way there, she was turned away. Didn't meet the criteria.

Meanwhile, people she knew started testing positive.
Read 12 tweets
3 Mar
A few coronavirus tips from me—instead of hoarding bleach wipes, organize a meeting with your neighbors. curbed.com/2020/3/3/21157…
Everything I learned about disaster preparedness I learned from interviewing @DrLucyJones—her book on how societies recover from catastrophic events is a must-read. curbed.com/2020/3/3/21157… Image
@DrLucyJones If you're in LA, the @ReadyLA program will send emergency managers like @k8hutton to your block to help you make a plan. I cannot recommend it enough—it's completely changed the way I think about our neighborhood.
curbed.com/2020/3/3/21157… Image
Read 5 tweets
4 Jun 19
Today, June 4, LA will announce the numbers from its 2019 homelessness count. We know to expect a "double-digit increase” from the year before. After you get angry, here's how to get to work fixing a problem the city—and state—is clearly not fixing for us. la.curbed.com/2019/5/31/1864…
Sign up for @yesinmyla's training sessions that help you talk to your neighbors about housing and homelessness and show you how to organize to support projects in your community. yesinmyla.org/trainings
On Friday, June 7 at noon, @EveryoneIn_LA is holding a community conversation. Call in to get your questions answered and find out how to join collective actions being taken across the city. everyoneinla.org/community-call/
Read 12 tweets
9 Apr 19
This morning, LA County's Board of Supervisors will vote on a new building for LACMA. @LangeAlexandra and I walked the campus discussing the role of museums in cities, the controversy surrounding the design, and how the new LACMA must meet the street. la.curbed.com/2019/4/8/18300…
When LACMA revealed the original Peter Zumthor design back in 2013, the museum planned a huge exhibition featuring a detailed architectural model and additional context for the design that was publicly displayed for months. la.curbed.com/2013/6/6/10235…
Since then, the design has undergone at least four revisions, with major changes to the size, shape, color, form, materials, and even the location of the building. la.curbed.com/2019/3/25/1828…
Read 28 tweets
24 Oct 18
I spent three months reporting what I have come to believe is the most critical issue that a majority of us—not just Californians, but all Americans—don't understand about our climate crisis. curbed.com/a/texas-califo…
It all started when I read @mateosfo's tweet and then @currymel's story about a historic meeting in June where California's top climate and transportation agencies got together in a room—FOR THE FIRST TIME.
Californians will have to drive less to achieve our climate goals—1.6 miles less per person per day, in fact. But the people who are allocating funding for our transportation systems are still building more places to drive. curbed.com/a/texas-califo…
Read 5 tweets

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