Eyes on Internet Shutdowns
A series of articles and resources highlighting community strategies for documenting human rights violations during internet shutdowns, and their role in achieving justice and accountability.
A series of articles and resources highlighting community strategies for documenting human rights violations during internet shutdowns, and their role in achieving justice and accountability.
This collaboration between WITNESS and Berkeley Copwatch offers new resources and guidance on building community oriented video databases for police accountability.
WITNESS supports critical research into pros and cons of approaches to deepfakes and mis/disinformation mitigation that focus on tracking the authenticity and provenance of audiovisual media.
To help reduce the massive U.S. prison population and to promote human dignity and growth over punishment and retribution, this project aims to support advocates, lawyers, and incarcerated individuals in using video to seek parole, clemency and sentencing mitigation.
This is the synthesis report of an expert meeting and knowledge exchange between i) leading researchers in media forensics and detection of deepfakes and other new forms of AI-based media manipulation and ii) leading experts in social newsgathering, UGC and OSINT verification and fact-checking.
This project focuses around the emerging and potential malicious uses of so-called “deepfakes” and other forms of AI-generated “synthetic media” and how we push back to defend evidence, the truth and freedom of expression.
This project explores what the right to record is, why it is essential for human rights, what laws and policies support the right to record at domestic and international levels, and how human rights defenders can exercise their right to record safely and effectively.
This work explores technologies and tactics for how live video, immersive video and other technologies of co-presence (e.g. social virtual reality) can connect people to meaningful frontline experiences of human rights issues and to meaningful actions that support activists in real time.
This collaboration between WITNESS Media Lab and El Grito de Sunset Park looks at over 300 hours of police abuse footage. In this project we share our learnings, tips and tools for organizing, analyzing and preserving human rights video collections to help ensure greater transparency and accountability.
This project analyzes close to a million tweets from a week during the crisis at the US-Mexico border. It captures how political content, specifically images, gets re-contextualized and leveraged as anti-immigrant propaganda on social media.
This project examines the challenges and possibilities of using video to document encounters with Immigrations and Customs Enforcement(ICE) in the U.S for justice.
This project examines how human rights advocates and journalists can turn the proliferation of eyewitness and perpetrator video into more ethical and effective storytelling and documentation of human rights abuse in the MENA.
Forty years after Morocco claimed sovereignty over Western Sahara, indigenous Sahrawis face political, economic, and cultural repression. Despite a media blackout, one source of documentation exists: media activists. Their videos provide a rare window into the human rights violations and social movements that Sahrawis want the international community to witness and act upon.
This project examines the impact of video in documenting police violence in the United States and its role in achieving justice and accountability. You’ll find articles, case studies and practical tips on documenting and sharing videos of police abuse
Capturing Hate explores how eyewitness videos provide new sources of data on the prevalence of trans-phobic violence.
This report examines how activists and journalists used drones to document the protests by Native American tribes and other advocates against the construction of the Dakota Access Pipeline in North Dakota.
The “Ethical Guidelines: Using Eyewitness Videos in Human Rights Reporting and Advocacy” section of the Video as Evidence Field Guide presents ethical considerations for journalists, activists, archivists and others who utilize eyewitness footage in investigations, reports and human rights documentation.
At the end of each year we reflect on the twelve months of citizen video we curated on the Human Rights Channel—what images stuck with us, what stories entered our consciousness, and what impact those videos made on the issues they documented.
This report contains depictions of war, abuse, examples of, or links to content that features, hate speech.