"After nearly 4 hours, I had a fairly clear idea of crime in the area," Jack recalls, "But I should not have had to search so many places for this information - it should not have taken so long."
Wildblotter indexes and aggregates data on crime from over 20,000 cities nationwide, and integrates sex offender mapping into a single website. People can also set up alerts for keywords and types of crime that they want to be contacted about. Robert says that the site has become popular for people that want to keep abreast of crime activity in their neighborhood. The free service is ad supported and serves over 177,000 users nationwide, but growth is skyrocketing as parents and neighbors spread the word.
Wildblotter's team of 3 is now working on some tools that users have requested; online tools to help organize and run neighborhood watches, and some tools to help users compare crime relative to other neighborhoods.
"Our data sources are neither perfect nor complete, so it can be challenging to help people compare crime with other locations," says Robert of their site. Missing persons and Amber Alert data feeds are currently in the works.
While basic ads keep the lights on, Wildblotter is in discussion with companies like ADT, Americas Most Wanted's Safety Center, and Dateline NBC. Partnerships like these will further strengthen Wildblotter's value proposition. Other discussions are ongoing which would make Wildblotter a web service for other site, a much more distributed model.
1 comment:
good idea
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