At Sparked, we're driven to make volunteering convenient, fun, and full of impact. We call it "microvolunteering" because you can do it whenever and wherever you have time. And now, with Sparked Enterprise, you can get your whole office volunteering together!
Great review and critique of crowdsourced labor. Scariest possibility: Turkers used to identify Iranian protesters – without knowing that that’s what they’re doing.
Also a good discussion about union organizing and crowdsourcing over at dolores labs: http://blog.doloreslabs.com/2009/12/not-quite-live-blog-jonathan-zittrain-on-minds-for-sale/
MoveSmart.org fosters vibrant and diverse neighborhoods by empowering housing seekers to move to opportunity.
Until now, information on neighborhoods has been buried in the back of academic reports, pinned to community center bulletin boards, and locked in data sets only available to planners, inaccessible to those who would benefit from it the most: housing seekers looking for a better neighborhood. MoveSmart.org will leverage the power of this information by combining these and other data sources into a single mapping engine built into a full-featured site that includes guides, tools, calculators, forums, and social networks, all designed to foster racial and economic integration.
Previous integration initiatives have proven costly and focused on families receiving public aid. Housing seekers with unlimited funds have always had the luxury of living where they choose. But for millions of families who have limited resources, finding the right neighborhood is difficult. MoveSmart.org will educate housing seekers about the benefits of integrative moves while at the same time providing suggestions on where to move, guides on how to move, and information on how to get involved in their new neighborhoods, inspiring pride in a new community and putting them on a path to true integration.
HOW YOU CAN HELP
MoveSmart.org has called in The Extraordinaries to help them compile information about communities nationwide.
Autism is a general term used to describe a group of complex developmental brain disorders known as Pervasive Developmental Disorders (PDD). The other pervasive developmental disorders are PDD-NOS (Pervasive Developmental Disorder – Not Otherwise Specified), Asperger's Syndrome, Rett Syndrome and Childhood Disintegrative Disorder. Many parents and professionals refer to this group as Autism Spectrum Disorders.
Today, it is estimated that one in every 150 children is diagnosed with autism, making it more common than childhood cancer, juvenile diabetes and pediatric AIDS combined. An estimated 1.5 million individuals in the U.S. and tens of millions worldwide are affected by autism. Government statistics suggest the prevalence rate of autism is increasing 10-17 percent annually. There is not established explanation for this increase, although improved diagnosis and environmental influences are two reasons often considered. Studies suggest boys are more likely than girls to develop autism and receive the diagnosis three to four times more frequently. Current estimates are that in the United States alone, one out of 94 boys is diagnosed with autism.
HOW YOU CAN HELP
Autism Speaks has called in The Extraordinaries to help them document and raise autism awareness in communities around the world.
Nature Abounds educates and empowers citizens to sustain their community through environmental stewardship such as watershed protection, conservation of native flora and fauna, and overall "going green".
Nature Abounds takes a two-tier approach to achieving our goals. For example, while educating citizens of all ages about "going green" and "environmental stewardship" on the national level, we also work with local officials overseeing public lands, such as national and state forest areas and designated waterways, on preserving our local environment through community involvement.
HOW YOU CAN HELP
Nature Abounds has called in The Extraordinaries to help raise awareness and create more sustainable, environmentally conscious communities
Law enforcement agencies are increasingly turning to their community
via YouTube, Facebook and Twitter for help reporting crimes and
identifying missing persons. Florida’s Broward County Sheriff’s Office
has posted photographs and personal items along with detailed
descriptions of unidentified crime victims on their website and is
asking anyone with information to please step forward and help them
solve these mysteries.
With more and more organizations turning to crowdsourcing as a tool
to complete important tasks, it would seem The Extraordinaries could
play a major role in the success of their endeavors. If the Broward
County Sheriff’s Office went one step further and joined forces with
The Extraordinaries, solving crime could be a click away. Creating a
mission that would allow the community to aid in identifying personal
effects and physical descriptions of otherwise unidentified victims
would be easy, simple, and engaging.
Fight crime while waiting in line
at the Post Office? Now that's extraordinary.
Want to create a micro-volunteering program for your organization? Apply now to join the pilot program:http://signup.BeExtra.org
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Kim Bale is the Community Outreach Intern for The Extraordinaries. She has also been published in Curve Magazine.
They said that crowdsourcing could never create art. They were wrong:
"Crowd-Sourced Star Wars Remake Gives 472 Geeks Their 15 Seconds of Fame" The site Star Wars: Uncut has decided to crowd-source a remake of the film by chopping it up into 15-second increments. Using the social video site Vimeo, people can sign up to download one of 472 15-second chunks of Star Wars: A New Hope and re-film it however they choose. Once complete, all 472 Vimeo clips will be stitched together in sequence to re-create the entire film. The results are already rolling in, and they're awesome.
Here's a fascinating convergence of technology and union organizing. Turkopticon has created a Firefox extension that let's you better monitor/evaluate Mechanical Turk employers. Are we approaching a "The Jungle" moment in the world of crowdsourced workers rights? The verbiage on this site sounds like a harbinger of such:
– We're watching out for the crowd in crowdsourcing because nobody else seems to be. – HELP WANTED $1.20 / hour Risk of repetitive stress injury No care for on-the-job injuries No guaranteed minimum wage No guarantee of payment –
Turkopticon raises a compelling point. MT workers are engaged in a wholly new type of relationship with their employers. They're performing microtasks – unknown, unseen, and managed via an automated system over which the employers don't have complete control. MT turns the human mind into a massive computational engine. This innovation brings both tremendous opportunity for solving new sorts of problems, while offering work via more flexible arrangements. However, it it is sure to raise many valid questions about workers rights.
At the very least, like the process of industrialization in the late 19th century, we're going through a transformation in the nature and role of work. And we've only yet begun…
Finally have 1/2 a day to luxuriate in back copies of The Economist. Came across an article about mobile phone sensors and the future of data gathering. A great read and especially apropos The Extraordinaries in its closing paragraphs:
"Some computer scientists look forward to the day when mobile phones and sensors can provide a central nervous system for the entire planet. An abundance of sensors, they believe, will lead to two things. First, the amount of data will increase, allowing scientists to build more realistic models. Alessandro Vespignani of Indiana University compares the current state of affairs to weather forecasting a century ago, before satellites had provided meteorologists with the data to build and optimise mathematical models. When it comes to problems such as tracking and predicting the spread of diseases and other environmental hazards, he argues, scientists can never get enough data.
Second, once people are able to contribute data to research projects from their mobile phones, it could provide an ideal way to broaden public involvement in scientific activities. This would be the next logical step after the popularity of web-based participation in scientific research, from folding proteins to categorising photographs of galaxies. Eric Paulos, a computer scientist at Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh, predicts the rise of “citizen scientists” able to measure and sample their surroundings wherever they go. When people can report mundane variables such as the level of traffic noise in their street or the degree of air pollution at the bus stop, he argues, their outlook on science changes. “People develop a relationship with and a sense of ownership over the data,” he says. He foresees amateur experts being driven by a new sense of volunteerism, the 21st-century equivalent of cleaning up the neighbourhood park."
Every time we turn around, there seems to be another article about crowdsourcing and volunteerism. The moment is ripe.
Press Contact: Jacob Colker (773) 742-5515 / jacob [at] BeExtra.org
San Francisco, CA – June 15, 2009 — The Extraordinaries is excited to announce today that we have been awarded a 2009 Echoing Green Fellowship!!! Echoing Green received nearly 1,000 applications for these 14 spots, and we are incredibly honored to join the ranks of the Echoing Green Fellows community.
This year’s fellows are an incredible group of people. Among the fellows are Former First Daughter of the United States Barbara Bush and her project Global Health Corps (http://www.ghcorps.org), Esra’a Al Shafei and her project Mideast Youth (http://www.mideastyouth.com), and our good friend Stephane de Messieres and his project Citizens Market (http://www.citizensmarket.org). But really, they’re all incredible people, and thus we list them all at the bottom of this post.
“After seventeen rounds of review, three rounds of cuts, four rigorous personal interviews, background checks, reference checks, supporting research, and more, we’re honored that our project has made it through and met the standards of such an incredible organization,” said Jacob Colker, Co-Founder and CEO of The Extraordinaries. “Echoing Green is in the business of dreaming with us — and then helping to make those dreams possible. It’s an extraordinary opportunity.” Colker continued.
With the 2009 class, Echoing Green has now invested over $28 million in 471 fellows since 1987, providing critical seed funding, health insurance, training, and the full backing of the entire fellows community to make these projects successful. Many organizations which Echoing Green funded at their early stages are today internationally-recognized: Teach For America, Working Today, Genocide Intervention Network, Citizen Schools, JumpStart for Children, College Summit, the Global Fund for Children, and City Year. A full description of the 2009 Echoing Green Fellows can be viewed at http://www.echoinggreen.org/fellows/year/2009 and a list with brief project summaries is attached below.
To get a better sense of the class of 2009, watch the three-minute video that is viewable from the home page of http://www.echoinggreen.org
Named after the William Blake poem, Echoing Green is a global nonprofit that supports emerging entrepreneurs who enact innovative solutions that address root causes to social problems. It is one of the only organizations solely dedicated to investing in early-stage social entrepreneurs. To drive transformative social change, Echoing Green identifies and assists some of the world’s best emerging social entrepreneurs launching new high-impact organizations. Through the fellowship program, Echoing Green supports this community of visionaries as they develop new solutions to society’s toughest problems. Founded by the leadership of the private equity firm General Atlantic in 1987, Echoing Green has supported more than 470 leaders sparking change in forty-one countries and forty-one states.
———————————— OTHER 2009 FELLOWS ————————————
Natalie Bridgeman – Accountability Counsel San Francisco, California
The Bold Idea: Partner with communities harmed by international finance and development projects to hold international institutions and corporations accountable and develop new accountability systems where none exist. Accountability Counsel partners directly with communities seeking redress for harm caused by development projects and works to create broad, systemic change through the creation of a new Foreign Investor Accountability Mechanism (“FIAM”). At the grassroots level, Accountability Counsel conducts trainings regarding accountability tools and assists communities with strategies to implement those tools, including claims to accountability mechanisms and litigation.
Stephane de Messieres – Citizens Market Cambridge, Massachusetts
The Bold Idea: Leverage crowd-sourcing tools and citizen journalism to better inform consumers seeking to engage in ethical consumption and enable these consumers to use their full market power to influence environmental and social issues. Citizens Market is a user-generated website where anyone can contribute a review and a rating for any company’s performance on a social or environmental issue. Consumers can access a company’s scores by searching the site or by using text messaging or a barcode scan for the product when purchasing. Citizens Market’s aim is to host a vibrant online community of 1 million information contributors.
Bethany Henderson – City Hall Fellows, Inc. Pasadena, California
The Bold Idea: Incentivize and empower diverse, top college graduates to tackle social ills from within existing government institutions, thus ensuring our cities have leaders capable of confronting cities’ myriad challenges. City Hall Fellows serve as special assistants to senior city managers working on substantive projects. During their Fellowship, Fellows engage in an extensive curriculum to explore how their city works, why it works that way and the people, organizations and issue that impact local policy making. City Hall Fellows received over 400 applications for its inaugural cohort of twenty-one Fellows. Bethany has plans to expand to multiple cities in the US and to increase the Fellowship class size to between 250 and 500 Fellows per year.
Eric Glustrom – Educate! Boulder, Colorado
The Bold Idea: Empower high school students in Uganda to become the next generation of socially responsible leaders through a two-year leadership curriculum and long-term mentoring that equips students to create social enterprises. Educate! disrupts the rote memorization-based education system in Uganda by equipping high school students to create social enterprises through a two-year socially responsible leadership curriculum, long-term mentoring, and an alumni network.
David del Ser – Frogtek New York, New York
The Bold Idea: Boost the productivity and income of small shopkeepers in the developing world with affordable business tools that can be run on mobile phones. Frogtek develops simple business tools using touchscreens and barcode readers that uneducated microentrepreneurs can use. The organization partners with local community organizations, microfinance institutions, and mobile carriers to distribute the tools.
Julie Carney and Emma Clippinger – Gardens for Health International Cambridge, Massachusetts
The Bold Idea: Enable HIV-positive individuals to improve their nutrition and health through low-cost sustainable agriculture practices. Gardens for Health International (GHI) provides legal support to communities of people living with HIV/AIDS, enabling them to form small business cooperatives and to gain access to arable land. GHI provides micro-loans to the cooperatives, delivers nutritional training and identifies and provides the initial investments for high impact agribusiness opportunities, such as tomato greenhouses, fruit tree nurseries, mushroom production and animal husbandry.
Barbara Bush and Jonny Dorsey – Global Health Corps New York, New York
The Bold Idea: Build the next generation of global health leaders and improve the quality of healthcare services for the poor by connecting outstanding young professionals from around the world with health-focused organizations. Global Health Corps (GHC) partners with organizations with proven success but limited resources to host international teams of young professionals for a yearlong fellowship. GHC recruits outstanding fellows from the U.S. and abroad who possess skills that will add immediate value to the organization and who show strong leadership potential.
Sarah Hemminger – Incentive Mentoring Program Baltimore, Maryland
The Bold Idea: Empower struggling teenagers to break the cycle of poverty, drugs and lack of education by surrounding them with “families” of mentors who fill critical gaps in academic and social support. The Incentive Mentoring Program (IMP) families coach life skills through activities based on three elements: academic assistance; community service; and team building. Without overburdening individual volunteers, a team of six to twelve mentors led by an experienced “head of household” can form customized solutions to the challenges these children and their families face.
Veena Ramanna – IndiaGoverns New Delhi, India
The Bold Idea: Change the nature of political discourse in India by providing constituency and Members of Parliament performance information to voters, citizen activists, and journalists. IndiaGoverns focuses on collecting, analyzing, and organizing development data, such as investments in infrastructure and schools, and performance data in politically meaningful terms. IndiaGoverns then uses community partnerships, mobile phone technology, and the internet to disseminate the information to the electorate.
Angie beatty and Shawn Mckie – The J.U.I.C.E. Project St. Louis, Missouri
The Bold Idea: Combat disease mortality in inner cities by reimagining the corner store as a one-stop shop for nutritious yet affordable food, free exercise training/activities, media/health literacy education, and art programs. Situated in a predominantly Black and low-income neighborhood, The J.U.I.C.E. Project provides free and on-site programming that blends media/health literacy education with physical exercise and art for social change. They empower youth to make healthy lifestyle choices by helping them understand how food, physical activity, and behaviors (e.g. heavy television, alcohol, and tobacco consumption) impact their physical and mental health.
Esra’a Al Shafei – Mideast Youth Manama, Bahrain
The Bold Idea: Connect youth from the Middle East and North Africa online to promote human rights, religious freedom, tolerance, and free speech. Mideast Youth provides the only creative space for youth to freely express themselves, and exchange information, experiences, views, and opinions, visibly involving various minorities who have been persecuted, censored, and violently discriminated against for d
ecades.
Dhruv Lakra – Mirakle Couriers Mumbai, India
The Bold Idea: Create meaningful and sustainable employment opportunities for low-income deaf adults in India, thereby increasing their standard of living and making them economically independent. Mirakle Couriers is a full-service courier company that offers delivery and tracking services to clients in Mumbai. All delivery and back office functions will be performed by deaf employees. In addition to providing job training, Mirakle Couriers provides life skills training for their employees including personal financial management.
Adam Stofsky – New Media Advocacy Project New York, New York
The Bold Idea: Empower defenders of human rights and social justice by integrating video and internet social networking into their advocacy strategy, enabling them win their legal cases and organize communities. New Media Advocacy Project will pioneer strategies for using video in courtrooms, legislatures, and communities. It will use social networking to give advocates an unprecedented connection to their client communities, allowing them to locate the best witnesses and gather evidence.
Just having heard about Amazon.com's new Crowdsourcing-powered service, I thought I'd give it a try.
Summary: take a picture of any product, Amazon uses it's crowd-powered Mechanical Turk to find it for you.
What I did:
I took a picture of a product in my house (a Sodastream Seltzer water maker – my favorite product bar none) and used Amazon's iPhone app to upload the photo to them.
Results:
Within 2 minutes, they found the product, listed it on my Amazon.com home page, sent me an email, and showed the result in the iPhone app. Astounding. This is a whole new way of computer programming – and it's predicated on the crowdsourcing engine. Think how well this could work for nonprofits / social good.