Video
Summary
Description
Picking up where a prior technology-focused talk left off, Malone flips the lens: instead of asking how emergency managers should adopt new tools, he asks what it would take for technologists to design tools that fit real emergency management practice, budgets, workflows, and training realities.
The talk walks through key cases and lessons from crisis informatics research, including how quickly information appears on social media during disasters, why “more data” becomes a problem, and how misinformation can create a second disaster on top of the first.
Key themes covered:
* What is crisis informatics? How ICT (social media, texting, IoT, email, platforms) intersects with emergency management
* The challenge of technology education: how hard it is to teach complex tools when we forget what it felt like to learn them
* A core problem in disasters: information is created at massive scale, requiring automation to sift, verify, and interpret
* A speed lesson: social media posts can appear faster than official tools (e.g., early tweets during an earthquake)
* The “big data” reality: why analysis often happens long after events (and why real-time is so fragile)
* Boston Marathon bombing case: crowd investigation, media attention shifting toward Reddit, and how verification chains can break
This session is especially useful for emergency management students, crisis informatics researchers, public sector technologists, and anyone designing tools for disaster response.