Next year they want to have That’s Suspicious Behavior go nationwide and have communities have access so that they can be proactive and preventive in real time.
The TSB team is focused on making social change and helping people be more civically engaged. The people who talk about tech and continue trying. She signed up to go to many events such as LAUNCH, and was turned down until finally, she was given the opportunity and advises other tech inspired black entrepreneurs to stay in the circle of people in the know. Kidd has been a tutor for many years and she wanted to inspire the children within the community that they can do the same thing. She chose that program because “Things have changed really really fast. Angel investor Jason Calacanis (Uber, Calm, Robinhood) interviews the worlds greatest founders, operators, investors and innovators. Her master’s degree was in Communication Management, with a specialty in Online Communities at the University of Southern California . The members of That’s Suspicious Behavior are not to become vigilantes. That Suspicious Behavior is about neighborhoods protecting themselves through awareness. For now, most of the other apps available online are connected directly to emergency services. The difference between Kidd’s app and other similar applications is that reporters of suspicious behavior are anonymous. “It was something that I really wanted to do for my community and other communities like it…You really want to know what’s going on and how you can change it.” Kidd said. He cheerfully tells the 20 or so entrepreneurs gathered there for his Launch Incubator class what to expect over the. Photo by Chuck Barry Dressed in a black T-shirt, sneakers, and loose green khakis, Jason Calacanis, FCLC ’93, bounds into a conference room in downtown San Francisco. If you choose to report suspicious behavior via the app, your options for tagging surrounding activity are: “aggressive begging,” “vandal,” “creepy person,” “fight,” and “possible theft.” The app allows for community members to be aware of what is going on around them and give them a chance to avoid it. Brooklyn-born entrepreneur and angel investor Jason Calacanis aims to bring the real Silicon Valley to TV.