Teen Developing App toprevent police brutality

Teen-Developing-AppTeen Developing App toprevent police brutality

17-year-old George Hofstetter, a tech entrepreneur, is creating an app for police traffic stops.

By Nigel Roberts

Look out Silicon Valley, here comes a young, Black tech entrepreneur focused on using technology to change how the world views race.

     Black Enterprise spoke with 17-year-old George Hofstetter, who is working on some of today’s most troublesome social justices issues.

Like many other high school seniors, Hofstetter is in the hunt to land a seat at a top university. But unlike most of his peers, he’s already a business owner. He established George Hofstetter Technologies Inc. at age 16 and was recently an honoree of the Equal Justice Society.

The teenager told Black Enterprise that he’s currently working on CopStop, an app to help prevent police brutality. Right now he’s correcting a few kinks in the code.

Developing apps that document excessive police force is a fertile area, according to The Huffington Post. The wave of viral videos showing police killings of unarmed Black men inspired app developers to collaborate with advocacy groups. They’ve produced dozens of smartphone apps that enable users to document allegations of police abuse—many of them with the intention of preventing miscommunication during police encounters.

Hofstetter told the magazine that his interest in technology grew from participating in his first hackathon at age 13. At that event, Hofstetter and his friend created an app to enable students of color to support each other at predominantly white private schools.

“At the time, I was attending a private school and experienced institutionalized racism,” he told Black Enterprise. “We found a way to help other students.”

That experience drove Hofstetter to focus on how he could “really change the world’s perspective on race through technology.”

He has his sights set on pursuing his interest in artificial intelligence at UCLA, where he would like to study computer science and psychology.

 

About Carma Henry 24481 Articles
Carma Lynn Henry Westside Gazette Newspaper 545 N.W. 7th Terrace, Fort Lauderdale, Florida 33311 Office: (954) 525-1489 Fax: (954) 525-1861

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