Go read this history of smartphones as tools to document police brutality

Photo by Amelia Holowaty Krales / The Verge

In 2020, almost anyone in America has the ability to record and instantly share high-definition video at the press of a button. Smartphone cameras let people share videos of things like vacations and family events. But with increasing regularity, they’re also letting individuals document instances of horrific police brutality and share them with an audience that wouldn’t have otherwise heard about them or wouldn’t have believed it if they did.

The phenomenon is the subject of a new piece in The Wall Street Journal. It’s a fascinating look at how our ability to record instances of police brutality has evolved over the last 30 years, and it’s well worth a read.

Over the last decade, while tech companies were focused on marketing…

Continue reading…

via The Verge – All Posts

Check out the Finding Your Identity Podcast!