| Activist app developers: Reachout.com's winners |
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| Written by Anne Collier |
| December 01, 2012 |
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The winning app developers of Reachout.com's "Don't Just Stand By" cyberbullying prevention contest not only received prize money but also serious professional mentoring: * Timothy Mullican, 15, in Alabama, who has been writing code since he was in the 6th grade. The first-place winner, who aspires to being an information security specialist for government or the private sector, told Reachout that he “created my app so those who are being cyberbullied would have an easy way to identify and report offensive posts among their Facebook friends." Timothy was supposed to get five hours' mentoring but San Francisco-based software engineer Andrew Kane gave him 10 hours. In response to research that shows how effective it is for bystanders in bullying situations to support the victim, Reachout.com, a mental health site run by the nonprofit Inspire USA Foundation, put a call out earlier this year for programmers aged 13-18 to "help inform and empower potential bystanders." There's so much that's great about this competition, from the recognition it gives young programmers who want to use their skills to make a difference to the way it paired contestants with mentors. |