Crowdsourcing Log

crowdsourcing news in the world

Crowdsourced project research on Parkinson’s disease

March31

Google co-founder Sergey Brin wants to crowdsource project Providing research on Parkinson’s disease Wants 10,000 to participate in efforts.

Mr Brin is funding a crowd-sourcing project to gather information about Parkinsons disease, an illness suffered by his mother. Mr Brin reportedly has an elevated risk of Parkinson’s and has between a 20 to 80 per cent of contracting the disease.

“I kind of give myself 50-50 odds of getting Parkinson’s in 20 or so years, 25 years,” the New York Times reported Brin as saying.

“But I also give it a 50-50 shot of medicine catching up to be able to deal with it.”

He wants 10,000 people to fill out an online survey and provide genetic scans to get a clearer picture of how the disease manifests, help find risk factors and ultimately provide treatment.

The Google co-founder is working in conjunction with his wife Anne Wojcicki’s genetics testing company 23andMe, and will provide expensive genetic testing for vastly reduced amount. In Australia, genetic testing for known gene mutations that can cause Parkinson’s disease can cost up to $2400.

Mr Brin will be the one to fund the research, which is estimated to be several millions of dollars. But Associate Professor Kay Double from the Prince Of Wales Medical Institute says that, while the project may provide valuable information, it is unlikely to find a cure.

“If it was well designed, it may assist finding bio-markers or genetic markers for the disease,” Professor Double said.

“It may also find new risk factors in the environment, but it’s unlikely to find a cure.

“It’s going to give you an indication of why people are getting the disease.”

Prof Double says the greatest risk factor is age.

In 2005, there were 63,000 known sufferers of Parkinson’s in Australia, and that number could reach 126,000 by 2030 due to Australia’s ageing population, according to Prof Double.

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Crowdsourcing : IdeaConnection

March31

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Different kinds of ideas are being shared and posted at the internet by many people around the world at every second, but these ideas are not easy to be discovered. Because every ideas you share in the internet takes time before it reaches your targeted audience unless people who are good in researching this would be easier for them to find out . But, imagine if these ideas were not just posted anywhere but were crowdsourced to be used to solve problems for the Public Good.

This is exactly what IdeaConnection.com, an online database service is attempting to create.  The purpose of IdeaConnection is to:

To give businesses access to the world’s most creative and innovative minds, who work collaboratively to solve problems and develop innovations.

To give the world access to an Encyclopedia of Solutions that is being developed from input by the public, for the Public Good.

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Help the Migratory Birds with Crowdsourcing

March30

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“Bird Week” has to do with flocks — but not flocks of birds — flocks of data and flocks of people.

It turns out that information on migratory birds is one of the best sources of data we have on the effects of climate change. Migratory bird data allows scientists to track subtle changes in climate that force birds to migrate earlier or later in the season and to different geographies.

The North American Bird Phenology Program (NABPP) has 6 million data points going back to the 1880s — there is one very significant problem: Those 6 million data points primarily exist on handwritten note cards stored in 40 file cabinets in a basement in Virginia. Wired’s Science blog has the details.

Do you think how crowdsourcing can resolve this problem?

Find out how by reading the full article here

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Crowdsourcing JavaScript Integration Testing

March29

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John Resig creator of the jQuery JavaScript library, has released Test Swarm, a crowdsourcing platform for distributed continuous integration testing for client-side JavaScript. Frustrated with traditional JavaScript testing environments that don’t scale, John’s new project which is currently is private alpha, aims to provide a systems for outsourcing browser related testing to large groups of people or communities.

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Crowdsourcing List by Anjali Ramachandran

March29
Crowdsourcing is being utilized as the way of problem solving and approach to innovation in a wide a rage of industries.  Here, is a wonderful list of crowdsourcing examples wiki, created by Anjali Ramachandran, an Account Manager with the UK based digital strategy consulting company, Made by Many. This is a good starting point to evaluate the spread and impact of crowd-sourcing.
The examples were divided into four broad themes which include: competitions and initiatives sponsored by brands, customization and businesses that channel the power of crowds. I was going through the list, looking for examples from India and found two!  I wasn’t expecting many but only two!
This may have to do with, how the incentives are designed for the crowd participation. The models of recognition and incentives for participation, for example like Wikipedia, that worked in the west may not work in India. They may have to be heavily incetivized with prizes. But then again, I haven’t seen any examples under the ‘brand sponsored competition’ theme.  May be they are missing from the list or may be not.
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Crowdsourcing to Crowd Funding

March28

62d93d7e3747391143d1046dce0afb991633f986Crowdsourcing, a word that coined in the last few years to describe the process by which an organization puts out a request to the crowd for information, ideas and solutions.

Now comes crowd funding, an offshoot discussed in Monday’s Wall Street Journal. In this variation on crowdsourcing, customers or enthusiasts can invest small amounts in a given product or venture, in return for a share of any profits that might ensue. Meanwhile, these small web-savvy investors also have an immediate interest in promoting the product or venture by posting messages in appropriate venues on the Internet. So far, the concept of crowd funding is getting its first major tryouts in the worlds of music and fashion, through various websites dedicated to promoting the efforts of new artists in these fields. The success of these early crowd funding initiatives may help introduce the idea to the broader business world.

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Crowdsourcing : Ponoko

March28

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Ponoko is a new crowdsourcing website created for all the people with unique and creative ideas that they can use to make money .

Ponoko lets you either shop and buy creations that others have made, or you can submit your own design with one of their downloadable templates and let Ponoko tell you how much it will cost to turn your creation into reality! And if you are not so savvy with design programs, you can place a post on Ponoko ID and let a designer bid to help you create your brain baby! Not only that, but there is no minimum order requirement, so if you want to sell your newly created gadget, Ponoko will let you set up shop at no cost!

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Crowdsourcing : Joydevivre

March27

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Do you have a design or product you’d like to see manufactured and sold?

Joydevivre.org is a crowdsourced innovation portal for people to submit product ideas and eventually make money from them.

The concept is simple. You send them a design. They pre-sell it. If they sell enough, they make the tooling and invest in the manufacturing using the proceeds from the pre-sales to cover costs. The original designer gets a royalty from the sale.

What do you think of this idea?

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Mass Customization via Crowdsourcing

March26

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“The general assumption was that a market that can make jeans exactly my size and allow me to put my own slogan on a pair of customized Nike sneakers would somehow free me from capitalism’s ideological octopus… Few, relatively minor changes [intend] to give the customer a feeling of personal involvement in the production process”. - Michael Strangelove, The Empire of Mind

As the author of a book about the anti-capitalist movement rising up thanks to the internet, it is no surprise to find that Strangelove is critical of the increasing mass customization available to us. For him, it is just another ploy by the corporations to control us, but make it feel as if we are in control. Strangelove gives a couple examples of “mass customization” by big brands. According to an article on portfolio.com, here are a few more available:

* Wedding rings (tiffany.com lets you choose cut, size, band, setting, etc)
* Kleenex.com lets you design your own tissue box for $4.99
* M&Ms lets you put your initials on their chocolates
* You can print any colour, pattern, or image on Keds canvas shoes for $60

Strangelove claims in his book that within 10 years, 20 - 20% of all products sold will be mass customized. Those are a lot of choices! But as I mentioned, he looks upon this “choice” in a negative way: we do not really have a choice when we are still giving corporations power over our social order. Strangelove calls mass customization a “Myth”. I call it a “Blessing”. Not because I want a pair of shoes with my face on them (although come to think of it…), but because of the hidden benefit that stems from the thought processes of companies who say “we are letting our customers create our products”.

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Crowdsourcing: Pay your bills through Mobile

March26

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What happens when you combine crowdsourcing with mobile phones and a ready money transfer/billing platform?

Following on from today’s theme of micro-payments - Nathan Eagle’s talk at eTech on crowdsourcing via mobile phone - touches on numerous examples of mobile innovation in East Africa, spanning give-away SIM cards, USSD and voice to text transcription.

What happens when it’s easier to pay electronically in a taxi in Nairobi than in NYC or London? When your (mobile) identity can be given away (to would-be high-spending customers) for free? Some of you are old enough, bless, to remember surfing the web with dial-up - how did your usage pattern change when you switched to always-on broadband? What happens when you take the same shift in experience and apply it to text messaging? That open USSD session is no less powerful than an empty search box waiting for your next command. Sprinkle a couple of billion mobile phone into the mix.

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