As a run-up to Do Din, an urban arts and technology festival in
Hyderabad, We are hosting a small event in Bangalore this
Wednesday(tomorrow) at 7 High Street. The event, DataLore will focus on
misrepresentation of data in maps and visualizations.

Please join us if you are in/around Bangalore!

Date/Time: Wednesday, 20th November at 6 PM,
Venue: 7 High Street, Cooke Town, Bangalore. (Map: http://is.gd/LTOqW7)

More information about the event (http://do-din.org/datalore/):

People who want to make the world a better place look towards data in an
effort to make that change. This very data then needs to be channeled
into maps, statistics, and visualizations before it can be useful — and
people are doing this everywhere. Stories of politics, corruption,
oppression, and war are being told around the world using such tools.
Unfortunately, a lot of what is being made fails at its task.  Maps that
miss the point, visualizations that fail to engage, and statistics that
mislead, all undermine action. On Wednesday evening, as a run-up to
Do-Din, DataLore will attack this problem on two fronts:

"You can’t just throw a map at a problem" - Sajjad Anwar

When all you have is a hammer, everything starts to look like a nail.
There are maps being made for every reason but some of them lack the
point, they misrepresent information, they lie or they fail to engage
the audience. We would like to discuss how people come up with these
maps, what disasters they cause and how, as storytellers, we can improve
the situation.

"Nothing is what it seems — especially not statistics" - The Ballot

As they say, there’s lies, damned lies, and then there’s statistics.
It’s easy to mislead or be misled by statistics and visualizations.
Preconceptions and agendas can leak into them, and colour them with
bias. Sometimes, a lack of knowledge about statistics leads to false
conclusions, which is rather disastrous. We’ll use some examples to show
you how this can happen, and how to both interpret and represent data
properly.

About the speakers:

Sajjad Anwar is a hacktivist and programmer based in Bangalore. He works
in the research and design of data analytics and infographics. He hearts
maps and often makes one. Along with two others, he runs the
geohackers.in collective. Find him on Twitter.

The Ballot is an initiative by Pooja Saxena and Nirbheek Chauhan which
releases weekly visualizations depicting statistics about India’s
democracy. You can find their work at http://theballot.in.

-- 
Kaustubh Srikanth
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