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New app will crowdsource data about bad drivers from cyclists

Data from users in Washington DC is redirected to city transportation departments

A new app has been launched that allows cyclists in Washington DC to quickly report dangerous driving behaviour. In response to reports, OurStreets provides users with the vehicle’s outstanding parking and traffic camera offences and also shares all its information with various groups, including the city’s transportation departments.

The app began in the summer of 2018 as a Twitter bot called How’s My Driving DC. If you tweeted a number plate to it, you’d receive a record of offences associated with the vehicle taken from public databases.

Bicycling reports that one in three vehicles tweeted to the bot had outstanding citations.

Developers Daniel Schep and Mark Sussman then turned this into a web app that let users submit more detailed reports to the district’s government.

Complaints about city-owned vehicles and taxis were forwarded to the relevant departments.

You can use it to report blocked bike lanes as well. About a third of the 18,000 reports submitted have been for bike lane violations with roughly another third for other violations of no-parking zones. (Fast Company highlights a Kia that was reported for being parked in a bike lane which had $17,040 of fines associated with it.)

The OurStreets phone app launched today. While most of its features are geared for use in Washington, cyclists elsewhere in the US will also be able to contribute data. (It’s not setup for the UK at all, as far as we can tell.)

Sussman admits in that in the majority of cases, “direct action is nearly impossible,” but says that drivers of city-owned vehicles and taxi drivers have been reprimanded following reports.

He also believes the data can help identify problem areas.

“Data from OurStreets will be vital to determine how best to deploy resources to monitor bike lanes,” he said. “Additionally, I think there is an opportunity to overlay OurStreets data with citation data in real time and optimise enforcement routes for all enforceable driving behaviour.”

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4 comments

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ayewalters | 4 years ago
1 like

Scope to cross reference with car insurance databases to help assess annual premium...?

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RobD | 4 years ago
1 like

I think something like this in the UK would be good, assuming councils/the police took it seriously. Cars that are being flagged up by multiple users on multiple occasions really should be looked into by the police. Councils might get an idea of where badly parked cars etc are causing the most issues and could actually do some work to improve things based on evidence for once.

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CygnusX1 | 4 years ago
2 likes

Good idea, but on some journeys I would never make it to the destination as I would spend my time filing reports.  Now if they linked  it to the phone's camera in video and some clever AI to detect the poor parking/bad behaviour and it could do it automatically. Would still need an unlimited data plan for all those reports though.

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hmas1974 replied to CygnusX1 | 4 years ago
1 like
CygnusX1 wrote:

Good idea, but on some journeys I would never make it to the destination as I would spend my time filing reports.  Now if they linked  it to the phone's camera in video and some clever AI to detect the poor parking/bad behaviour and it could do it automatically. Would still need an unlimited data plan for all those reports though.

There aren't that many bad drivers to be fair. This is a valuable service. If users are discerning then there's a chance the more dangerous offenders can be removed.

Then focus on the 2nd tier of bad driving.

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