U.S. technology non-profit organization
Ameelio is a technology non-profit which provides free communications and educational tools for incarcerated communities and their relatives. It is the first non-profit telecommunications company to provide free prison communication services in the United States.[ 1] [ 2]
Ameelio was co-founded in 2020 by two Yale students, Uzoma "Zo" Orchingwa and Gabriel Saruhashi, to allow incarcerated people in the United States to access free communications services.[ 3] [ 4] [ 5] [ 6] Orchingwa and Saruhashi were motivated to found the organization because of the extremely high cost and inaccessibility of communications in prison,[ 7] [ 8] which worsened during the COVID-19 pandemic .[ 9] At launch, it allowed users to send photos and physical print-outs of digital letters to inmates,[ 10] it later expanded its services to include teleconferencing .[ 11] The organization received funding from Jack Dorsey , Eric Schmidt , Vinod Khosla , Kevin P. Ryan , Rich Barton , Devin Wenig , and Jack Smith .[ 12] [ 13]
Ameelio currently supports free communications for incarcerated individuals and their families in the states of Iowa, Colorado, and Maine.[ 14] [ 15]
^ "Their App Sends Free Mail to Incarcerated People. Now They're Helping Prisoners Register to Vote" . nextcity.org . Retrieved 2022-01-31 .
^ "Ameelio wants to take on for-profit, prison-calling rackets after starting with free letters to inmates" . TechCrunch . Retrieved 2022-01-31 .
^ "Sending a message" . yalealumnimagazine.com . Retrieved 2022-01-31 .
^ Koldas, Kardelen (July 8, 2021). "Uzoma "Zo" Orchingwa '14 offers sensible solutions to prison communications" . Colby News .
^ "The Most Creative People in Business 2021" . Fast Company . Retrieved 2022-02-24 .
^ Roose, Kevin (2021-12-27). "The 2021 Good Tech Awards" . The New York Times . ISSN 0362-4331 . Retrieved 2022-02-24 .
^ "Tech Company Aims to Disrupt Predatorial Prison Phone Industry" . www.colorlines.com . 2021-02-17. Retrieved 2022-02-24 .
^ Primack, Stef W. Kight, Dan (2019-06-08). "Private companies are making money off the prison system in every way imaginable" . Axios . Retrieved 2022-02-24 . {{cite web }}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link )
^ Canales, Katie. "An app will turn your digital message into a physical letter and send it to loved ones in prison for free as the pandemic bans in-person visits to jails" . Business Insider . Retrieved 2022-01-31 .
^ Chan, Rosalie (July 4, 2020). "Ameelio helps communicate with incarcerated loved ones for free" . Business Insider . Retrieved 2022-01-31 .
^ Zabbasajja, Jennifer (September 8, 2021). "Can a Nonprofit Disrupt the Pricey Prison Phone Industry?" . www.bloomberg.com . Retrieved 2022-02-24 .
^ Au-Yeung, Angel. "The Prison Communications Nonprofit Backed By Twitter's Jack Dorsey And Former Google Chief Eric Schmidt" . Forbes . Retrieved 2022-01-31 .
^ "Annual ABE grant program supports 15 'boots-on-the-ground' projects" . ABA Journal . Retrieved 2022-01-31 .
^ "Ameelio's free video calling service for inmates goes live at first facilities" . TechCrunch . Retrieved 2022-01-31 .
^ "Cost of prison phone calls throwing families into debt" . KMGH . 2021-09-22. Retrieved 2022-04-21 .