The structured dataset is built by a script that processes the data every time a change is made. This allows sites to ingest the data and build new front ends.
- http://www.2020protesters.com/ -
- https://policebrutality.netlify.app/ - list of events you can visually see per state, per city, and link to the specific incident.
- https://onebadapple.org/ - Mega list of events.
- https://bread.codes/PoliceBrutality/ - Timeline of police brutality events.
- https://too-many-incidents.netlify.app/ - see the incidents as cards, sort by date, and location.
- https://frontend-1750f.web.app/ - map of incidents with links.
- https://maminian.github.io/brutality-map/ - map of incidents with links.
- https://2020policebrutality.netlify.app/ - click on a state to see the links visually.
- https://datastudio.google.com/s/oFSSsjw2kAY - a dashboard with stats on a state and city level.
- http://api.policebrutality.io/v1/videos - a REST API that points to backed up video files. Managed at https://github.com/nickatnight/policebrutality.io
- https://github.com/2020PB/police-brutality/tree/main/tools/downloader - a tool to back up videos from this database to your local computer.
- https://codepen.io/949mac/pen/abdOggV - an example of using the API with jQuery
What will you build?
- Go to https://github.com/2020PB/police-brutality/tree/data_build
- Choose which API you'd like to consume from a markdown, CSV or JSON file.
- Most folks should use the JSON file
- You can also use the 846 API if you need lat-long-geo information from here, or direct links to video evidence from here