George Hofstetter

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
George Hofstetter
Hofstetter lecturing at North Carolina A&T.
Born
George Emmett Coates-Hofstetter

(2000-04-16) April 16, 2000 (age 24)
EducationMenlo College | Hasso Plattner Institute of Design | University of Oxford | University of Cambridge
OccupationComputer programmer | human rights activist | tech entrepreneur
Known for
TitleFounder, chief executive officer, and executive chairman of GHTech Inc.
Board member ofKingmakers of Oakland | GHTech Inc.
AwardsSocial Justice Award: The Equal Justice Society
WebsiteOfficial website

George Hofstetter is an American computer programmer, tech entrepreneur, and campaigner for Black rights who has been active since 2013. He went on to found GHTech Inc., a software and curriculum development company that builds at the intersection of technology and social justice. He is the current chief executive officer and executive chairman of GHTech Inc.[1]

Career

In 2013, aged 13, Hofstetter competed in the Qeyno Labs Hackathon in Oakland, California, where he and his group developed a social network called "Connect the Dots," creating a space for Black students in private predominantly white schools to share their experiences with one another.[2] His team finished third at the hackathon.[3]

The following year's Qeyno Labs Hackathon was sponsored by ESSENCE and Qeyno Labs in New Orleans and was after the launch of YesWeCode, an initiative started by Prince and Van Jones after the killing of Trayvon Martin with the goal of helping 100,000 young women and men from underrepresented backgrounds to be successful in the tech sector. He and his team developed an app called CopStop to address issues of police violence in Oakland.[4][5]

After the hackathon and his graduation from The Hidden Genius Project, Hofstetter received a two-year internship in the office of Oakland mayor Libby Schaaf.[6]

Hofstetter founded his company at age 16 with the goal of helping other kids of color gain entry into the world of technology as innovators. He worked on a project for Capital One DevExchange to create a free mobile online curriculum, UpToCode Academy. In the fall of 2017, He was honored by the Equal Justice Society during their annual gala in San Francisco, CA for his work through GHTech Inc.[7][8]

Hofstetter was included in Google's Black History Month Pay it Forward Challenge in March 2019.[9]

In October 2019, he spoke at a TedxYouth event at the Seattle Academy of Arts and Sciences. His talk was entitled "How technology redefined can be a social justice super power."[10]

Hofstetter's most recent projects/events include the launch of a social networking app designed for education for a California-based non-profit Kingmakers of Oakland, being featured in the documentary, ‘Use of Force: The policing of Black America’ alongside Alicia Garza and Chuck D.[11]

After a viral incident that became international news[12] where Hofstetter was the target of a racist digital attack[13] during his studies at the University of Cambridge. He wrote an opinion piece for the University of Oxford's student paper, The Oxford Blue. [14]

References

  1. ^ "17-Year-Old Tech Phenom Develops Apps that Address Social Problems". Black Enterprise. 4 October 2017.
  2. ^ Guynn, Jessica. "Changing the world one hackathon at a time". USA TODAY.
  3. ^ "Program Nurtures Tech Genius Among Oakland's Teens". KQED. 18 March 2014.
  4. ^ "Who Is George Hofstetter, Who Created The 'CopStop' App As A Teenager?". Oxygen True Crime. 15 January 2022.
  5. ^ "Oakland Teen Is Creating an App to Prevent Police Brutality". EBONY. October 7, 2017.
  6. ^ "19-year-old tech CEO inspires SSU forum". Santa Rosa Press Democrat. 22 September 2019.
  7. ^ "Student Spotlight: Meet George". Menlo.edu.
  8. ^ "17-Year-Old Tech Phenom Develops Apps that Address Social Problems". Black Enterprise. 4 October 2017.
  9. ^ Project, The Hidden Genius (11 March 2019). "Black History Month Pay It Forward Challenge: Recognizing students making a difference (Part 2)".
  10. ^ Giacomazzo, Bernadette (31 July 2021). "How GHTech's George Hofstetter Continues To Prove That Age Is Just A Number". AfroTech.
  11. ^ Burns, Karpani (18 March 2022). "Afro-futurist George Hofstetter has a story – and dreams". San Francisco Bay View.
  12. ^ Kpakima, Kumba (July 28, 2022). "Black Tech Prodigy Responds To Racist Incident With "Social Justice Superpower"". People of Color In Tech.
  13. ^ Oxford Student Paper, Blue News (July 20, 2022). "Racism at Oxford Summer School". The Oxford Blue.
  14. ^ Hofstetter, George (August 5, 2022). "From Oakland to Oxbridge: A 'Hacktivist's' Fight Towards Decolonisation and African Liberation". The Oxford Blue.