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lets-stop-wildfires-hackathon

Together We Can Make Things Happen !

Let’s Stop Wildfires Hackathon

wildfire

This hackathon is conducted by AI For Mankind. The goal is to come up with ideas to help solve California wildfires crisis and we believe that open sharing and collaboration are important in accelerating innovation and driving meaningful change locally and globally. Public and private partnerships coupled with citizen participation can help win the fight against wildfires. Everything built during the hackathon will remain as open source with The MIT license. Special thanks to FUEGO to provide guidances to make this hackathon possible.

Note: If you wish to keep your idea/project private, please do not enter this hackathon.

This hackathon has ended. Thank you for your participation. Stay tuned for the reboot of the hackathon coming soon.

Here Are The Final Submissions:

Here are the final submission projects. Thank you everyone for your participation and support ! Great work indeed ! Stay tuned for more upcoming updates.

https://github.com/tsofoon/wildfire

https://github.com/RaymondDashWu/ai4crowdsourcing-wildfire-hackathon

https://github.com/WIVIV/Project_3_AFI

https://github.com/amitdoda1983/lets-stop-wildfires-hackathon

https://github.com/pravrc/wildfireDetection

https://github.com/junjunjd/wildfire_smoke_detection

Participants

Presentation

To participate in the hackathon: Register here

Last day to register is Feb 19, 2020.

Contact Us

If you have any questions, please feel free to

Email us at ai.for.mankind@gmail.com or

Join us on Slack at https://tinyurl.com/vepdjpf

By participating in this hackathon, participants agree to be bound by all of the terms and conditions as set out below.

Eligibility

  1. This hackathon is open to everyone at least 18 years old and live in the United States.

Hackathon Period

The hackathon starts on Oct 16, 2019 at 5PM PT and ends on Feb 23, 2020 at 11:59PM PT.

Note: Hackathon end dates are at the sole discretion of AI For Mankind and may be subject to change.

Requirements

  1. Teams must be comprised of 1-8 people.

  2. You have to create a public github repository for your entry with the MIT License.

  3. Participants are not allowed to enter in projects containing confidential information or subject to the proprietary rights of any person or entity.

How Will My Entry be Potentially Used?

By participating in the hackathon, you agree to ALL of the following statements:

  1. You understand and acknowledge that your entry/submission in their entirety will become open source (MIT License) and made publicly available to everyone. You agree to make any code produced/submitted for the hackathon (your entry’s github repository) available under the terms of The MIT License and other created works under the terms of the CC BY-SA 4.0 licence. Participant hereby irrevocably licenses all Work Product under the MIT License located at https://opensource.org/licenses/MIT. “Work Product” means all ideas, concepts, proposals, materials, and all other work product of any nature whatsoever, that are created, prepared, produced, conceived, or reduced to practice by Participant solely or jointly with others during the Hackathon. Participant represents and warrants that, to the best of his or her knowledge, the Work Product is and will be Participant’s own original work and does not and will not infringe the intellectual property or proprietary rights of any third party, including, without limitation, any third party patents, copyrights or trademarks.

  2. You understand and acknowledge that after the submission deadline has passed, your project (github repository) that has been submitted to the hackathon cannot be deleted or made private. Your project repository will also be featured on the AI For Mankind Let’s Stop Wildfires hackathon github page after the hackathon has concluded.
  3. You understand and acknowledge that others may have developed or commissioned materials similar or identical to your entry and you waive any claims you may have resulting from any similarities to your entry.
  4. You understand that you will not receive any compensation for use of your entry.

Note: If you do not agree to above and want to keep your idea/project private, please do not enter this hackathon.

Rules of Conduct

  1. Respect each other.
  2. Do not violate copyrights, trademarks, or other such rights.
  3. Observe data protection legislation.

Note: Teams can be disqualified from the competition at the organizer’s discretion. Reasons might include but are not limited to breaking the Hackathon Rules or other unsporting behavior.

References

  1. The MIT License
  2. CC BY-SA 4.0 Licence

Wildfire Smoke Detection Challenge

Do you know there are more than 250 cameras installed around mountaintop in California. These are the AlertWildfire camera system. Another camera system is called HPWREN cameras.

Can you build a wildfire smoke detector for these cameras ?

Image from one of HPWREN camera
Image taken by HPWREN camera.

Image from one of AlertWildfire camera
Image taken by AlertWildfire camera.

Mountain with fog image from one of AlertWildfire camera
Mountain with fog image taken by AlertWildfire camera.

Mountain with fog image from one of AlertWildfire camera
Mountain with fog image taken by AlertWildfire camera.

We launched these Wildfire Smoke Detection Challenge IA, IB and II in conjunction of the Let’s Stop Wildfires Hackathon. You can use your solution as the entry to the Let’s Stop Wildfire Hackathon.

Learn more about Wildfire Smoke Detection Challenge

Mentors for Hackathon

  1. Adam Kraft Machine Learning Engineer from Google Brain
  2. Anna Bethke, Head of AI for Social Good for Intel
  3. Jianming Zhang, Senior Research Scientist from Adobe Research
  4. Jigar Doshi, Machine Learning Lead from CrowdAI
  5. Kinshuk Govil, Lead for Machine Learning based early wildfire detection system with FUEGO
  6. Tim Ball, President of Fireball International
  7. Vladimir Iglovikov Kaggle Grandmaster, Senior Computer Vision Engineer at Level5, Self-Driving Division, Lyft Inc.

Quick Start

Checkout the following resources to get you started

  1. HPWREN Camera Datasets

  2. Google Colaboratory to develop deep learning application on free GPU

  3. Tensorflow based Wildfire Smoke Classifier

  4. Tensorflow based Wildfire Smoke Detector

  5. FUEGO firecam repo

Wildfire Resources

  1. FUEGO Wildfire Detection Slides by Kinshuk Govil
  2. A Review on Forest Fire Detection Techniques
  3. Wildland Fire Assessment System
  4. The United States Fourth National Climate Assessment Volume II
  5. How Wildfire Works
  6. Fighting Wildfires
  7. Wildland Fire: What is Hazard Fuel Reduction?

Tensorflow Resources

  1. Tensorflow Quickstart
  2. Tensorflow Tutorials
  3. Install Tensorflow in PyCharm
  4. What is transfer learning? Exploring the popular deep learning approach
  5. Transfer learning in TensorFlow 2 tutorial
  6. Deep learning unbalanced training data

Papers

  1. Do Better ImageNet Models Transfer Better?
  2. SpotTune: Transfer Learning through Adaptive Fine-tuning
  3. Taskonomy: Disentangling Task Transfer Learning

Events

  1. RSVP to join upcoming Let’s Stop Wildfires Onsite Hackathon on Saturday, Jan 11, 2020 at Insight Data Science, San Francisco