Raul Mandru: Surveillance Maps of the World Syndicate content

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I found it interesting that recently a young german was honoured with the red dot in communication design for his interactive game/installation "surveillance map of the world.

Really wonderful piece of information design and - like in city murmur - the concept of showing hidden qualities of informational space.

I invited Raul to our Network (contact after the jump)

I found it interesting that recently a young german was honoured with the red dot in communication design for his interactive game/installation "surveillance map of the world.

Really wonderful piece of information design and - like in city murmur - the concept of showing hidden qualities of informational space.

Raul shares a video of his project and fortunately already joins our network. https://www.designresearchnetwork.org/drn/users/raul_mandru

The Surveillance Map of the World from Raul Mandru on Vimeo.

The surveillance Map of the World

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The Surveillance Map of the World is an interactive mobile intallation based on the global surveillance ranking from Privacy International.

The surveillance of people and instances of encroachment into private data are constantly on the rise – be it through video surveillance of public buildings or entire cities as a measure to prevent crime, or in shops to prevent shoplifting; be it through collecting and sharing personal data on the Internet, or last but not least in the form of scanning and storing a person’s biometric data including fingerprints in his or her passport.

The portable and interactive installation “Surveillance Map of the World” gives not only an example, but a real experience of how much surveillance of our everyday life is actually conducted. Users navigate with their mobile phones on a projected world map consisting of thousands of pictograms taken from bird’s eye views. The pictograms symbolise satellites, computers and shopping carts, as well as the Patriot Act signed into law by US President Bush after 11 September 2001. The density of the pictograms at different points on the map reflects the level of surveillance that individual countries have reached. Based on data collected by Privacy International, the installation allows the user to make worldwide comparisons, and thus turns users into surveillants themselves – an experience that becomes intensively real when users click on their present location and see themselves in real time.

Concept, Research and Design: Raul Mandru
Coding: Tim Gatzky

We are interested in developing and exhibiting the tool worldwide. Currently the work is shown and documentated in the Zeche Zollverein Museum in Essen, Germany. So if you have a gallery or a big street window or know somebody who knows somebody get in touch with us!
raul@mandru.de

Awards and publications:
Red Dot Junior Prize (Grand Prix) 2008
Red Dot best of the best 2008
Adobe Design Achievement Awards- Semifinalist
Novum 1/2009
Slanted Magazine #6
Reflektor Annual