> As for smartphones, there’s #SignalSafe, a mapping app that collects anonymous, crowdsourced ICE agent alerts and accompanies them with submitted photos, videos, and text notes. The Mexican government has even launched an app, #ConsulApp Contigo, that allows Mexican Americans to quickly notify their home country’s consulate if they get in any trouble with ICE, then be connected to legal help or get a message out to their family and friends.
https://slate.com/technology/2025/05/iceblock-app-ice-resistance-immigration-crackdown-deportations.html
#ICEThugs #ICEApps #ICEThugTracking #uspol #ICEBlock
Immigration Crackdowns Are Booming. So Is the Digital Resistance Fighting Them.

As immigrants face threats under Trump 2.0, a scrappy movement of techies is creating real-time tools to resist.

Slate

@hosford42
From April!
> This is not a phenomenon born in isolation. As the Washington Post reported just days ago, a grassroots digital insurgency has been brewing, with Americans—activists, neighbors, the simply outraged—turning to the internet to track ICE’s movements. On X, in makeshift online forums, they chart the agency’s forays, a crowd-sourced counterweight to its institutional silence.
https://migrantinsider.com/p/signalsafe
#ICEapp #ICEThugs #ICEThugTracking

@TechCrunch

Mysterious New App Tracks ICE Activity

SignalSafe allows users to drop a pin on a map with what they see in their communities.

Migrant Insider