Facebookers spend up to 12 hours a day scouring riot pictures
The online rage and name calling that flooded Facebook after the June 15 Stanley Cup riot has now subsided.
Still, a handful of Facebookers continue to pore over dozens of hours of footage to try to identify the perpetrators of last month’s mayhem.
They post their findings to the Facebook Vancouver Riot Pics group, which has more than 101,100 “Likes.” One of the core members estimates that close to 300 rioters have been identified on the group’s page.
“We’re doing this on blind faith that it’s helping the process,” said 51-year-old Lee Timar. “I think what we’re doing probably helps facilitate [people turning themselves in].
“People may be going on the site and thinking, ‘Oh, there I am.’”
On Thursday, 1,594 photos had been uploaded from YouTube screen captures and suspected rioters’ Facebook profiles, as well as collages of individual rioters — which Timar and a team of several other diehard amateur sleuths have contributed.
“Basically what we do is we watch the videos, look for somebody [allegedly] committing an offence, and if there is a clear face shot then we just take a snapshot from the video and put links to the video so that police or other people can see where that actually came from,” Timar said. “So there’s a direct link to the actual [alleged] offence, not just a static snapshot of somebody with their arms in the air.”
Timar, an IT professional between jobs right now, said that after watching the riots unfold on TV he began looking at some of the photos posted online. Before he knew it he was spending up to 12 hours a day scouring YouTube for images to try to prove people’s participation in the riot.
“I started looking at some of the photos and realized by getting involved it was a way to contribute.”
He said he had been looking for a way to give something back to society and jumped at the opportunity to help a police force facing an inordinate amount of digital evidence.
“I think it’s frustrating for everybody as to how slowly it seems to be going, with no charges coming forth,” Timar said. “But for those of us involved in identifying people, we know how much work it takes for the police to bring it all together and really create their case.” |