Anticipating the future through vocabulary
Bryan Alexander 2013-04-06
A new database project attempts to identify impending genocide by spotting key textual indicators. It’s crowdsourced, called Hatebase, and a co-sponsor describes it like so:
Hatebase, an authoritative, multilingual, usage-based repository of structured hate speech which data-driven NGOs can use to better contextualize conversations from known conflict zones.
A fascinating idea, one part digital humanities, one part pre-crime. It can also be localized, as a
critical concept in Hatebase is regionality: users can associate hate speech with geography, thus building a parallel dataset of “sightings” which can be monitored for frequency, localization, migration, and transformation.
(via Slashdot; cross-posted to Scanning for Futures)