Saturday, June 27, 2026
ADVT 
International

Facebook 'Safety Check' Lets Users Reassure Friends In Crises Like Nice Attacks

Darpan News Desk IANS, 15 Jul, 2016 12:10 PM
    TORONTO — In the wake of an attack that saw a truck slam into a crowd of Bastille Day revellers in Nice, France, killing at least 84, Facebook has activated its "safety check" feature.
     
    The tool helps users of the social network inform their Facebook friends that they are safe during crisis situations.
     
    If Facebook detects that you are in an area near a major crisis like a natural disaster or violent attack, it will send you a notification asking if you are safe.
     
    A sample safety check message on Facebook's website reads, "Are you OK? It looks like you're in the area affected by the Mento Park Earthquake. Let friends know if you're safe."
     
    You can then click a button that says, "I'm Safe," and a post will show up on your news feed indicating that you are OK.
     
     
    Facebook users worried about friends who may be near a crisis zone can also visit the safety check page to see a list of any friends in the area, and find out which ones have checked in as safe.
     
    The safety check page also includes a map of the affected area and a link to news reports of whatever crisis is happening.
     
    If Facebook has misjudged your location — which is determined by the city listed in your profile, your last location, or the city where you are using the Internet — and sent you a safety check notification erroneously, you can also mark that you are not near the danger.
     
    Facebook says it activates the safety check feature during dangerous situations with clear start and end points, when a large number of people would be concerned about the status of loved ones. 
     
    The social media giant has said the feature would not be useful in areas of ongoing crises like wars or disease epidemics, as it would be impossible to declare someone truly safe.
     
     
    Introduced in October 2014 to be used during natural disasters, Facebook began activating safety check for violent incidents after the Paris terror attacks in November 2015.
     
    More recently, the safety check was activated after the bombing and shooting attacks on Istanbul's airport on June 28, and the mass shooting at Pulse nightclub in Orlando, Fla., on June 12.
     
    Facebook is currently working to allow users to initiate safety checks themselves, without having to wait for the site's employees to recognize a need for it first.
     
    The feature is not the only way in which people use the social network during times of crisis.
     
    French news service Agence France Presse has reported that, in the hours after the Nice attack, appeals were sent out by Facebook users trying to locate an eight-month-old baby boy who went missing in the chaos.
     
     
    An appeal for help posted by a woman who said she was not the baby's mother, was shared thousands of times before a young woman who saw it contacted the parents to say she had found the baby and taken him home with her.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Pope calls on world to stop crimes against religious minorities in Iraq

    Pope calls on world to stop crimes against religious minorities in Iraq
    Pope Francis on Sunday expressed outrage at violence aimed at religious minorities in Iraq, where fleeing children have died of thirst, and called on the world "to stop these crimes....

    Pope calls on world to stop crimes against religious minorities in Iraq

    Iranian passenger plane crashes shortly after takeoff, killing 39 people and injuring 9

    Iranian passenger plane crashes shortly after takeoff, killing 39 people and injuring 9
    A regional passenger plane assembled in Iran crashed Sunday while taking off from the capital, killing 39 and injuring another nine onboard, according to a senior transportation official and state media....

    Iranian passenger plane crashes shortly after takeoff, killing 39 people and injuring 9

    Typhoon-hit Japan asks a million to evacuate

    Typhoon-hit Japan asks a million to evacuate
    More than one million people have been told by authorities to leave their homes as a powerful typhoon hit south-west Japan, BBC reported Sunday....

    Typhoon-hit Japan asks a million to evacuate

    Gaza blockade must end to enable its reconstruction

    Gaza blockade must end to enable its reconstruction
    A seven-year blockade on the Gaza Strip must end to enable reconstruction and a political solution must be found to resolve the conflict, a UN official said Saturday....

    Gaza blockade must end to enable its reconstruction

    Officials: 17-year-old Boy arrested in Death, Sexual Assault of 6-year-Old Washington Girl

    Officials: 17-year-old Boy arrested in Death, Sexual Assault of 6-year-Old Washington Girl
    BREMERTON, Wash. - Authorities say a 17-year-old has been arrested in the death and sexual assault of a 6-year-old girl whose body was found near the mobile home park she vanished from last weekend.

    Officials: 17-year-old Boy arrested in Death, Sexual Assault of 6-year-Old Washington Girl

    Authorities: Woman, 78, caught with $41,000 in cash in Girdle, Bra, Bag at Detroit Airport

    Authorities: Woman, 78, caught with $41,000 in cash in Girdle, Bra, Bag at Detroit Airport
    ROMULUS, Mich. - A 78-year-old Florida woman tried to fly on an international trip to the Philippines from Detroit Metropolitan Airport with almost $41,000 in cash hidden inside her girdle, bra and carry-on bag, federal authorities said.

    Authorities: Woman, 78, caught with $41,000 in cash in Girdle, Bra, Bag at Detroit Airport