#Dronestagram – the website exposing the US’s secret #drone war | World news | The Guardian
►http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/shortcuts/2012/nov/12/dronestagram-website-us-drone-war
Information about UAVs is being dragged out of Washington little by little, which is where James Bridle comes in. Using what little information there is, Bridle, creator of the New Aesthetic micro-blog, has set up Dronestagram. By marrying images from Google and target details from the BIJ, he has started to show the places that have been hit in UAV attacks. Bridle says he wants to make them “a little bit more visible, a little closer. A little more real”.
On his blog, booktwo.org, Bridle argues that “drone strikes are the consequence of invisible, distancing technologies, and a technologically disengaged media and society... the technology that was supposed to bring us closer together is also used to obscure and obfuscate.” The images on Dronestagram may be just “foreign landscapes”, but he hopes their immediacy and intimacy will add to the growing demand for transparency. Earlier this year, Apple rejected an App that did much the same thing, apparently on the grounds that many people would find the content objectionable.
►http://dronestagram.tumblr.com
7th November: a strike at night in a village 40km from Sana’a. Alleged al Qaeda leader Adnam al Qathi and his bodyguards Rablee Lahib and Radwan al Hashidi were killed. A child and two others are also reported injured. Drones had been seen over the area for three days.