Siku is the Inuktitut word for âsea ice.â Itâs also the name of a new app: an Inuit-led social media project, developed by the Arctic Eider Society, that is designed to help hunters and other community members navigate and share knowledge about a northern landscape in flux.
Available on both mobile and web platforms, SIKU provides tools and services to support ice safety, language preservation, knowledge exchange, safe travel and self-determination.

Joel Heath, Executive Director of the Arctic Eider Society, explains that Inuit were already using social media platforms like Facebook to trade knowledgeâbut that meant giving away their intellectual property. Furthermore, limitations on those platforms made them inadequate for sharing knowledge over time.
âWith SIKU, we can allow people to own their own data, develop a privacy policy, and control how their data is shared.â Users can post photos and share hunting stories, which are presented along with news feeds, satellite imagery and climatic data on tides, marine forecasts and sea ice. [SIKU pulls some of its ice-thickness data from the SmartICE project; see page 18 for a feature on SmartICE âeds.] Privacy settings are tailored specifically for Indigenous knowledge, to ensure no one can use the data without permission.
The app features profiles of wildlife, sea ice and traditional place names, all of which can be tagged to create cumulative knowledge banksâas SIKUâs website puts it, âLiving wikis of Indigenous knowledge.â

âThe classic approach was that elders would share knowledge [of what they saw happening on the land] with scientists,â says Heath, âand then the scientists would say, âThatâs cool,â and then spend five years trying to do a study to prove what the Inuit had already told them was true.â With SIKU, the continuous data stream coming from hunters in the fieldâwhich, until recently, was only shared orallyâcan be recorded, added to and owned by Inuit.
This approach is reflected in the appâs guiding principles: respect, self-determination, ownership of intellectual property, and integrityâall centred on protecting and mobilizing Inuit knowledge.
One of the early stewards of SIKU was the late Piita Kattuk, an elder from Sanikiluaq. He passed away in November 2019, but his words continue to inspire SIKUâs mission to bring together tools and technologies from both traditional Inuit culture and the contemporary digital world: âItâs time for the computer and the harpoon to work together.â
Visit the SIKU website to learn how to use SIKU in classrooms and workshops.