Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Apps vs. attacks

There are new smart tools for assault victims

- Peter Holley Peter Holley is a technology writer for The Washington Post.

In her testimony before the Senate Judiciary Committee on Thursday, Christine Blasey Ford detailed the agony involved in stepping forward with allegation­s of sexual assault against Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh. The depth of her trepidatio­n may have surprised some, but victims of sexual assault such as Silicon Valley CEO Jess Ladd say it’s a common feature of victimhood.

“It often takes a lot of time for people to label what happened to them as assault,” explained Ms. Ladd, who said she was assaulted as an undergradu­ate at Pomona College in Claremont, Calif. “Once you’ve had your moment of realizatio­n that what occurred was wrong, then you have to ask, ‘Do I want to come forward?’ and, if I still believe my perpetrato­r is a good person, ‘Do I want to ruin the life of a good person? Blaming yourself can be easier.”

Because that decision is so trying for many assault survivors, Ms. Ladd founded Callisto, a nonprofit organizati­on that has created software for reporting sexual misconduct on college campuses. The reports are timestampe­d and saved on an encrypted database but not immediatel­y submitted to authoritie­s. The software tracks complaints and then flags those that involve a repeat offender, alerting victims and school officials.

By letting victims know that their assailants have been accused of targeting more than one person, Callisto aims to remove psychologi­cal barriers that make reporting assault so difficult. If a victim thinks his or her assailant may target even more people, she added, that can also be a powerful incentive to take action.

“You can go to the police, but most college survivors don’t have any interest in going to the police,” Ms. Ladd said. “Sometimes they just don’t want to see their assailant every day or to be on record in case they do it again. Sometimes they want that person to be talked to or expelled.”

Over the past decade, dozens of apps and websites have been created to help survivors of sexual assault record and report such crimes. They are designed to assist an enormous pool of potential victims. The Rape Abuse & Incest National Network reports that more than 11 percent of college students experience rape or sexual assault through physical force, violence or incapacita­tion. Still, less than 10 percent of victims on college campuses report their assaults, according to the National Sexual Violence Resource Center.

The apps range from electronic reporting tools such as JDoe to legal guides that provide victims with access to law enforcemen­t and crisis counseling. Others help victims save and share relevant medical informatio­n in case of an assault. The app Uask includes a “panic button” that connects users with 911 or allows them to send emergency messages to people with their location.

Since its debut in 2015, Callisto’s software has been adopted by 12 colleges — including Stanford, the University of Oregon and St. John’s University — and made available to more than 160,000 students, according to the company. Sexual assault survivors who visit Callisto are six times as likely to report, and 15 percent of those survivors have matched with another victim of the same assailant.

Peter Cappelli, a professor of management and director of Wharton’s Center for Human Resources, told NPR that he sees potential problems with survivors “crowdsourc­ing” their decision to report assaults.

“I don’t think we want to have a standard where the decisions are crowdsourc­ed,” he said. “I think what you want is to tell people [that] the criteria [for whether to report] are policy related, not personally related, and you should bring forward anything that fits the criteria, not [based on] whether you feel enough other people have made the complaint. We want to sometimes encourage people to do things they might feel uncomforta­ble about.”

Many of those reporting tools are geared toward students on campuses, but Callisto is expanding the software to reach women working in Silicon Valley’s tech industry next. The software will pair victims who have been assaulted by the same perpetrato­r, allowing them to coordinate via an options counselor.

Ms. Ladd plans to launch the service by the end of 2018 and said more than 20 percent of female founders of companies have been subjected to assault, often by venture capitalist­s from whom they seek investment­s.

“That’s a blind spot where there’s no reporting mechanism,” she said.

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