As
women become more vocal about the "atrocities" targeted towards them,
the internet gives them the perfect platform to voice/vent out their
anguish. While the venting is the aftermath of an incident, technology
has also come as a protector, with several smartphone/tablet apps that
aim to keep women safe when they are venturing out, unescorted.
How much
of this is actually useful, and makes the world safer, is not even
worth debating. Let us look at some popular initiatives currently making
the rounds, and try figuring out what is the best way to make these as
useful as possible:
App Way
There are several apps
that "inform" your loved ones of your presence and movement. However
considering all the limitations of the current tech infrastructure in
the country, these apps hardly deliver what they promise. 3G data
connectivity is priced exorbitantly, and in most cases doesn't offer you
promised speeds. Moreover, with all the mess around the 2G spectrum
allocation, just getting a service provider that lasts seems like a big
ask. All in all, the internet penetration in the country is dismal, to say the least. Cyber bullying is another issue that women have to put up with.
Going
a step further, the budget smartphones that have entered the Indian
market don't seem to be of much help either. Most phones promise GPS
navigation via internet, which doesn't really help on slow connections.
Moreover, the battery life on such devices is pathetic. But all that
doesn't seem so bad: After all in urban India, women at least have the
privilege to carry a cell phone around!
So
if your phone is showing sparks of life, and has a bit of signal
coverage, instead of fumbling around with an app, go ahead and actually
make a call to someone who can come to your rescue. However, if keeping
updating your phone with a "safety app" makes you feel safer, read here
to know how well it really works. While I really have nothing against
location-tracking apps personally, it is a double edged sword: On one
hand it tells your loved ones where to find you, but if the information
falls in the "wrong hands", you may also be stalked, or robbed.
Or you can wait for the government's dream of the wrist-watch styled tracking device to be brought to reality. But after the fiasco called Aakash, I am guessing it's going to be an unending wait.
Reporting Crimes
While
precaution is always better than cure, there are times when you have no
choice but to voice your anguish. Initiatives such as Safecity.in and Delhi Police's Special Cell For Women online
help women have an outlet to make complaints. Of the two, the former
comes across as a half-baked concept, and the latter looks more like a
one-way communication stream (or a publicity stunt, you can decide which
one is true by yourself). Coming back to Safecity.in, the website has
its heart in the right place: It lets you log sexual harassment
incidents based on the nature of the crime as well as its location.
However, it doesn't connect you with any officials to bring the
perpetrators to book. So while it does let you speak your heart out, it
does only that: You may also get trolled/ridiculed in public, if the
person you write about is net-savvy. After all, there seems to be
nothing more you can do than lash out on the internet: Reports of police
not taking such incidents seriously have been documented extensively, time and again.
When
everything is said and done, the situation isn't as grim it may seem on
the face of things: We've progressed from keeping issues closeted, to
actually coming out in the open and voicing our opinions. The next step
to put such offenders in their place is a reality that will happen soon
too: Let the optimism inside not die so soon.
Saturday, 9 March 2013
07:12
MR: EDITOR
Unknown
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