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Israeli App Used to Report Emergencies at Rio Olympics

SayVU, a new app that allows a user to send a distress signal even if a phone is locked, is being used at the Rio Olympics as part of its security initiatives. The app got its start as a student project at Ben-Gurion University of the Negev.

SayVU allows users to send a message by shaking the smartphone, pushing outside the lock screen, hitting the selfie button or even speaking to the phone.

The technology includes the option to automatically turn on the phone’s microphone and send a recorded voice message and locating information to an emergency hotline.

“We have established a hotline at the 2016 Rio Olympics,” says SayVU Chief Executive Officer Amotz Koskas. “The Olympics is a central platform to reveal our unique technology to the world.”

SayVU was chosen by ISDS, the Israeli company responsible for securing the Olympics.

The app uses patent-pending machine learning techniques to determine the user’s patterns and checks when it senses abnormalities. If there is no reply, the app sends out a distress message independently.

The technology was conceived and developed in the wake of the 2014 kidnapping and murder of three Israeli youth — Eyal Yifrach, Gilad Shaar, and Naftali Fraenkel — by members of the Palestinian terrorist group Hamas. One of the teenagers managed to call and report the kidnapping but the police did not immediately respond because they thought it was a prank call. At the time, Koskas, an MBA student at BGU’s Guilford Glazer Faculty of Business and Management, wondered if there was a technological means to prevent similar instances in the future.

The new technology tries to meet two main needs: giving citizens the tools to send out a distress message and location quickly in an emergency, and enabling authorities to get a clear, real-time situation report.

SayVU says it has embarked on a $2 million funding round and is developing strategic partnerships in the US, China, Europe and Africa.

The company was also just awarded a $1 million grant from the U,S,-Israeli BIRD Foundation, funded by Israel’s Public Security Ministry and the U.S. Department of Homeland Security. The funding is for a project to provide orientation within buildings under extreme conditions to first responders such as police, firefighters, and emergency medicine personnel.

(via Israel21c)

[Photo: SayVU / YouTube ]