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Kenyan Chief Foils Robbery Via Twitter

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."

50 comments

  1. M.O. by Tablizer · · Score: 4, Funny

    "They tried to steal our filing cabinet of birth certificates!"

  2. Your assistance is requested by Anonymous Coward · · 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.

    1. Re:Your assistance is requested by oiron · · Score: 0

      Wrong side of the continent...

      What? Did you think the US was the only thing in the universe with two coasts?

    2. Re:Your assistance is requested by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Surprise... it's comic book guy.

      I'll bet you're loads of fun at get-togethers.

    3. Re:Your assistance is requested by Urkki · · Score: 1

      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. And Greenland has only about 50k people. That's how small Africa is, and so stuff like "which coast" is rather irrelevant.

    4. Re:Your assistance is requested by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      /.../ Also Africa is about the size of Greenland, as irrefutably proven by this map. /.../

      Funky map projection. But that map seem to (roughly) show Scandinavia in the right proportions vis-à-vis Great Britain, the West and Central Europe, and N. Americas. When I try to explain how fucking large my home country (Sweden, the third largest country on the European continent) is compared to the other puny European countries (except Russia and Spain), nobody believes me, because Sweden looks very small in most world map projections.

      World maps are all evil, go buy a terrestrial globe.

    5. Re:Your assistance is requested by Urkki · · Score: 1

      Yeah, good old Mercator. 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.

  3. Two Crimes Committed by retroworks · · Score: 5, Informative

    Africa has more cell phones than toilets. http://blogs.worldbank.org/africacan/more-cell-phones-than-toilets The entire infrastructure was built on "e-waste", used cell phones were imported and hacked/jailbroken, which created enough subscribers for private sector companies to erect the towers. The free market bypassed the entire government-infrastructure track. Of course, there is evidence of a second crime here.... http://archive.basel.int/industry/mppi/gdfd30Jun2010.pdf Cell phones are labelled "e-waste" in Europe http://retroworks.blogspot.com/2011/09/new-world-order-interpol-calls.html and Africans who buy them have been declared "criminals" by Interpol.

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    Gently reply
    1. Re:Two Crimes Committed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      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.

    2. Re:Two Crimes Committed by timeOday · · Score: 1

      I don't think your post or your links establish the crucial point: has anybody been prosecuted who was NOT improperly dumping toxic waste into the environment?

    3. Re:Two Crimes Committed by retroworks · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Yep. Many have been prosecuted, many goods seized. Usually, it's someone like Mubarak, declaring working items "toxic waste". But it just takes a few seizures to put the chill on would be resellers and donors. In the UK, they take nice looking electronics, sabotage them, sell them to the Nigerians as "working", then bust the Nigerians for exporting waste. http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/crime/man-held-after-tonnes-of-illegal-ewaste-are-exported-to-africa-1816570.html This week a study showed 85% of the ones imported into Ghana and Nigeria were working, and the material at the dump in Nigeria (described in the Guardian) was generated by Africans after years of use. A lot of innocent people are getting screwed. I realize it's a niche issue for many here. But go ahead and read the Guardian article, then read the /. report on the Basel study last weekend.

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      Gently reply
    4. Re:Two Crimes Committed by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      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.

    5. Re:Two Crimes Committed by mikael · · Score: 1

      I'm just waiting for someone to post a picture of a portaloo built from broken mobile phones ...

      --
      Vintage computer adverts: http://www.vintageadbrowser.com/computers-and-software-ads
    6. Re:Two Crimes Committed by timeOday · · Score: 1
      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.

      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 can be legally exported to developing countries in West Africa to South-east Asia, where there is a thriving trade in second-hand computers and electronic devices such as DVD players." So, the stated intent of the law is not to discourage re-use.

      Now, as somebody who likes to fix things like broken iPods, I can see where there is value in broken goods. Sometimes you can get a new rechargeable battery for $7 and suddenly a "broken" device has $100 resale value. But if somebody imports a shipping-container full of junk, and 90% of it goes into a makeshift dump unprepared for heavy metals, the fact that they got a couple dozen working cellphones from it and managed to turn a profit does not make it OK. You can't really judge the guilt or innocence of individual cases on the basis of some one-sided blog posts.

      I agree there are real problems if officials are lying or bad evidence is being used to prosecute people who haven't broken the law. But what about the law itself? Do you think it should simply be repealed wholesale, or how would you like to see it modified?

    7. Re:Two Crimes Committed by cybernanga · · Score: 1

      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 sector companies that built towers first, and the first phones were bloody expensive.

      --
      www.Buy-Proxy.com - A "buyer-driven" global marketplace.
    8. Re:Two Crimes Committed by MattBD · · Score: 1

      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.

    9. Re:Two Crimes Committed by retroworks · · Score: 1

      "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 showing the actual documentation of the actual trade in Africa during the time the African in the Guardian article was accused of shipping to the unapproved dump with the child labor. Your "actual, documented problem" was not committed by the person arrested, and does not appear to be very actual, if you actually look at the documentation. Talk about high tech lynchings...

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      Gently reply
    10. Re:Two Crimes Committed by dunkelfalke · · Score: 1

      Locked phones do exist here. Especially dumbphones.

      --
      "It's such a fine line between stupid and clever" -- David St. Hubbins, Spinal Tap
    11. Re:Two Crimes Committed by Alan+R+Light · · Score: 1

      Got some mod points, tried to mod this up - accidentally hit "off topic". Hopefully posting in this thread will reverse it.

    12. Re:Two Crimes Committed by hobarrera · · Score: 1

      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.

  4. Who's Fault? by Frosty+Piss · · Score: 4, 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.

    --
    If you want news from today, you have to come back tomorrow.
  5. I can relate by 93+Escort+Wagon · · Score: 4, 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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    #DeleteChrome
    1. Re:I can relate by hitmark · · Score: 2

      Then find someone else to follow.

      Still, it seems most of the tech heads are moving to G+...

      --
      comment first, facts later. http://chem.tufts.edu/AnswersInScience/RelativityofWrong.htm
    2. Re:I can relate by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You can only take so much rambling about being unable to pop a pimple or photos of what they've eaten...

      I can't stand scat or the people who are into that sort of thing either :)

  6. This story brought to you by Twitter PR service by Little_Professor · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Or rather, Tweetminster, who seem to be quite adept at planting PR stories in the news. Meanwhile on the ground - hardly anyone in Africa uses twitter. Those that have access to mobiles and/or the internet use MXit, despite what Tweetminster/Portland Communication's recycled press releases would have you believe

  7. Surprised the robbers got away by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

    I'm guessing the chase scene looked like the New York City Marathon!

  8. Communication in Africa, not just in Kenya by Anonymous Coward · · 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.

  9. Altruistic flash mob by timeOday · · Score: 2

    It's a pity the cnn report doesn't make the connection between this occurrence and its normal reporting on flash mobs, which is basically that the initial flash mobs were fun and benign but were later used to orchestrate looting. Of course the technology doesn't know when it's helping to preserve or violate property law.

    1. Re:Altruistic flash mob by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      After reading that link, I'd like to recommend you re-evaluate your online news sources. Something with that many typos is hard to find truthful.

  10. Twitter might be good in some cases, by RoLi · · Score: 2

    ... but it might get you killed in others.

  11. "Useful twitter?" by nicholas22 · · Score: 1

    Sorry, but this is the most awful example I've heard of how Twiter can be a useful "service"... What's the moral of the story? She didn't have to send the text multiple times? Or that she didn't get billed for multiple texts? She could always call or text directly...

  12. What kind of demented post is this? by arcite · · Score: 3, Informative

    Perhaps this is how cellphones made their way initially, but the ICT revolution is built on sound business. There has been much investment from the Middle East and other telcom companies such as Vodafone. Cheap, low cost 'African' versions of phones are easily available for as little as $20. Cellphone services such as SMS, telephone banking, are revolutionizing hundreds of millions of lives. The great part is, this is still the beginning of the revolution, the next stage is to wire up everyone for highspeed internet, which is well underway, particularly in Kenya. I think, what you are really talking about is the shadow economy, or 'informal economy'. Laws are very flexible in many African nations, cargo containers full of all kinds of electronics make their way to the shores and docks of major African cities, e-waste included. However, most people would rather buy a store bought version if they can afford it, people like warranty after all. Indeed, there are thriving businesses for second hand cellphones, and even replacement parts and repair. Nothing goes to waste in Africa.

  13. Africans know the meaning of mob justice by arcite · · Score: 1

    Those guys probably could have been lynched to make an example to other thieves. Mob justice is very effective in African villages where police presence is weak or non-existent.

  14. Actually by arcite · · Score: 1

    There are more Twitter users in Kenya than Egypt (which is arguably a richer country). You'd be surprised.

  15. Are you dense? by arcite · · Score: 3, Interesting

    In this community, the neighbors all subscribed to the same twitter feed, so they all got the emergency call at the same time, and responded in strength to confront the thieves and catch them in the act. Quite the effective neighborhood watch if you ask me. Strength in numbers.

    1. Re:Are you dense? by Zebai · · Score: 1

      Yes but if these thieves had a rifle it would of been a dead neighborhood watch.

    2. Re:Are you dense? by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      Why do you think the locals don't have rifles? This photo is from Kenya...

  16. Untold conclusion to story by Anonymous Coward · · 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.

    1. Re:Untold conclusion to story by oiron · · Score: 2

      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...

  17. Dialog: by wbr1 · · Score: 2

    Thieves: "How'd you know we where the crooks?"

    Community:"A little birdie told us."

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    Silence is a state of mime.
  18. Cell phones are computers... by jklappenbach · · Score: 3

    I know the historical association is difficult to shake, but for billions of people on this planet, a cell phone will be their primary, and perhaps only computing resource. It's enough, however. With them, they can access the internet, send and receive text messages, and even in some classes of sub-smartphone devices, run applications. More than laptops, desktops, or any other computing factor, cell phones have lifted the standard of living for billions. With text messaging, literacy is promoted. With access to the internet, commerce, education, and knowledge of the world become available. Cell phones have changed the world, and IMHO, are one of the most powerful and transformative computing resources created to date.

    1. Re:Cell phones are computers... by Larryish · · Score: 1

      "With text messaging, literacy is promoted."

      ?

      OMG WTF

  19. Two sides by solarissmoke · · Score: 1

    Sadly it was the same ability to send messages to large numbers of people in near real time that contributed to the carnage of the post-election violence in 2008.