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Facebook may allow you to declare yourself safe during a disaster

Facebook is experimenting with a new system that would allow you or someone close to alert your fellow Facebook friends that you’re safe in the event of a disaster.

Photo of Kevin Morris

Kevin Morris

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If you were in an area struck by disaster, your friends and family’s first instinct would be to find out if you were safe.

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But considering the average Facebook user has 190 friends on the site, you likely wouldn’t want to spend a lot of time assuring each one–and besides, who’s to say you have access to Facebook, anyway? What if you were only able to make a short phone call? Could someone else declare you safe on Facebook in emergency situations?

That’s the idea being tested in Japan Wednesday. In cases where a user is caught in a disaster, that user’s Facebook friends have the option of marking that person “safe.” It’s similar to how one “likes” a status update.

This means, for instance, that if an earthquake strikes your town and you’re only able to spend a minute on the phone reassuring your sister you’re not hurt, she can quickly let all your Facebook friends know.

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Japan, of course, makes sense as a testing ground. When it faced tremendous damage in 2011 from an earthquake and tsunami, social media became a vital method for its residents to reunite with their loved ones.

A Facebook representative confirmed to the Daily Dot that it will be an occasional feature: “It feature will become available only during an emergency,” she said.

Photo by ER24 EMS (Pty) Ltd.

 
The Daily Dot