WebProNews

Tag: Crowd-sourcing

  • Crowd-Sourced Rally Car Driver Joins Reddit on its Cross-Country Internet Freedom Tour

    The Internet 2012 Bus Tour is mainly about promoting local businesses that are thriving with the help of the open internet and showing politicians that internet freedom can help create jobs. Mainly that, but it’s also about showing off what internet communities can create.

    Joining the Reddit tour bus on its cross-country journey is the Local Motors Rally Fighter, a community-designed vehicle that can be built by anyone with the tools and know-how. The car has a 6.2 liter, V8 engine and 430 horsepower, but it is street legal in all 50 states and can be built with off-the-shelf parts. Best of all, the design of the vehicle is copyrighted under Creative Commons, and all of the

    Adam Keiser, the sales and client relation manager at Local Motors, is driving the Rally fighter during the tour, and spoke with WebProNews during the tour’s stop in Lexington, KY.

    “It’s basically like driving a Corvette on Steroids,” said Keiser. “The Rally Fighter is the world’s first open-sourced, co-created vehicle on the market today.”

    Local Motors has a large community of automotive designers, engineers, fabricators, and enthusiasts. It allows people to co-create vehicles and parts, meaning that other companies have even leveraged the site’s community for their own products.

    Keiser stated that Local Motors’ crowd-sourcing abilities allow it to design cars very quickly, and for far less money than the process traditionally takes. In addition, the cars are created with the input of the people who will use them, which doesn’t happen at larger car companies, where cars are designed in-house and then marketed to customers.

    “With the Rally Fighter, we designed, developed, and created the first working prototype in 18 months at a total cost of $3 million,” said Keiser. “Now, a lot of people would think that that’s a lot of money, but [a Toyota Yaris] was probably, more than likely, an 8 to 10 year process and $1 billion. So, they have to sell a ton of those things to be profitable…whereas we can make 10 Rally Fighters a month and be profitable.”

    The company also open-sources all of the design details for the Rally Fighter, and has copyrighted it under a Creative Commons license.

    “You can literally go on to rallyfighter.com and download all the CAD data for that vehicle. We don’t hide anything,” said Keiser. ” All we ask is that you don’t sell it for profit.”

    Keiser’s passion for Local Motors and what the open internet can achieve is clear. He grew up in Pennsylvania and joined the automotive industry after college. He worked for the “big three” car manufacturing companies, but quickly grew weary of the aging car industry.

    “I just got burnt out really quick on the daily grind of your typical manufacturing process,” said Keiser.

    He went back to school for an MBA, during which time he found out about Local Motors. Soon after Local Motors moved to Phoenix to develop the Rally Fighter, Keiser followed.

    “I did not visit a single job board, I didn’t put my resume anywhere,” said Keiser. “I knew when I was packing my U-Haul with my wife and my dog that I was going to work for Local Motors.”

    Below is an introduction to The Forge at the Local Motors website, where the company’s community projects take shape:

  • TED Announces TED2013 WorldWide Auditions

    In an effort to broaden the scope of content and presenters at their conference next year, TED (Technology Entertainment and Design) announced that they’ll be holding public auditions throughout the world in order to put together a their first crowd-sourced program for TED2013.

    TED will be holding public auditions in 14 countries – Amsterdam, Bangalore, Doha, Johannesburg, London, Nairobi, New York, São Paulo, Seoul, Shanghai, Sydney, Tokyo, Tunis and Vancouver – between April and June 2012 in order to discover new talents and ideas that have the potential to change the world. Once auditions have been held, TED will be posting videos of all of the presenters so that the publica can vote for the presenters they’d like to see at TED2013. TED will then select the top 50 from those results to include in their 2013 conference.

    Among the specific talents that TED is looking for are: inventor, teacher, prodigy, artist, performer, sage, enthusiast, change agent, storyteller, and the spark (someone with a powerful idea worth spreading). This audition will be limited to presenters who have never given at talk at a TED conferende or been invited to one of TED’s many events.

    TED is a rich resource for budding polymaths and eclectic tastes. If you’re unfamiliar with what TED does, check out some of the previous talks given at some of their events below.

  • West Memphis Three Freed, Twitter, Internet Erupts

    The case of the West Memphis Three was made famous by the HBO documentary, Paradise Lost: The Child Murders at Robin Hood Hills have been set free from the Arkansas prison system that had been holding them since 1993. The controversy surrounding the incarceration of the Arkansas youths, who became known as the “West Memphis Three,” has made the story a national story for many years, as actors, musicians, and other activists rallied around in support.

    The story of the West Memphis Three is long and winding, especially if you haven’t seen HBO’s documentary. Wikipedia is a good starting point, because, for brevity’s sake, we’re going to focus on the reaction concerning the West Memphis Three’s release, which is blowing up the Internet, especially Twitter, as I type. Speaking of Wikipedia, the entry for the WMT has already been updated to reflect their release.

    There’s also a series of YouTube videos, that helped bring the story back to the forefront:


    Natalie Maines, lead singer for the Dixie Chicks, is a huge proponent of the WMT’s freedom, and her Twitter page reflected the news:

    The gag order has been lifted, so now I can tell you, I’m sitting in a holding room at the courthouse about to see three men walk free! 1 hour ago via Twitter for iPhone · powered by @socialditto

    From there, the cavalcade of reaction was on. Henry Rollins weighed in as well:

    WEST MEMPHIS THREE. FIND OUT ALL YOU CAN. BIG DAY. 1 hour ago via web · powered by @socialditto

    Twitter has officially been consumed by the West Memphis Three and Damien Echols, the one in the middle of the lead image, and the face of the WMT. Even Eddie Vedder, lead singer of Pearl Jam, has become a Twitter trend based on his support of the WMT. Apparently, he and Maines were there to greet them as they were released:

    Picture of Eddie Vedder at the press conference. #wm3 #westmemphis3 http://t.co/LrPQDu3 11 minutes ago via TweetDeck · powered by @socialditto

    The linked photo confirms Vedder’s participation:

    Eddie Vedder

    There is some contention about the conditions of the release, however:

    Whoah. West Memphis 3 will go free (after pleading guilty to murder) – http://t.co/NFlsOIU 29 minutes ago via web · powered by @socialditto

    Jason Baldwin says he did not want to accept today’s deal, but did so because Damien Echols was on death row. #WM3 7 minutes ago via web · powered by @socialditto

    The deal, according to various reports, were under the conditions of an Alford plea, which Wikipedia describes as:

    Alford plea (also called Kennedy plea [1], Alford guilty plea[2][3][4] and Alford doctrine[5][6][7]) in the law of the United States is a guilty plea in criminal court,[8][9][10] where the defendant does not admit the act and asserts innocence.[11][12][13] Under the Alford plea, the defendant admits that sufficient evidence exists with which the prosecution could likely convince a judge or jury to find the defendant guilty beyond a reasonable doubt.

    ABC.com references an anonymous source, who indicates as much:

    A person who spoke on condition of anonymity because of a gag order in the case told the AP the tentative deal includes a legal maneuver that would let the men maintain their innocence while acknowledging prosecutors likely have enough evidence to convict them.

    As indicated in the Natalie Maines tweet, this was done to prevent the WMT from suing the state of Arkansas, nevertheless, the conditions haven’t erased any of her joy:

    Beautiful things went down in Arkansas today. Beautiful beautiful things. 22 minutes ago via Twitter for iPhone · powered by @socialditto

    The “Free The West Memphis Three” website feels the same. Thanks to the immediacy of Twitter, there’s also links to the reaction of Damien Echols concerning the most talked about prison release in some time:

    Damien Echols’ statement on plea deal http://t.co/SgpGPNR 7 minutes ago via Tweet Button · powered by @socialditto

    The release, in part, says:

    I have now spent half my life on death row. It is a torturous environment that no human being should have to endure, and it needed to end. I am innocent, as are Jason and Jessie, but I made this decision because I did not want to spend another day of my life behind those bars. I want to live and to continue to fight for our innocence. Sometimes justice is neither pretty nor is it perfect, but it was important to take this opportunity to be free.

    And this, friends, once again demonstrates the incredible power of the Internet and social media in particular. Perhaps it didn’t help free the WMT, per se, but it certainly help spread the word about their freedom, which is almost as important.

    Information is still power, and social media is a powerful tool to deliver it by.

  • The Power of The Internet Brings Us The People of Burning Man

    Be it crowd funding or crowdsourcing or anything else of a successful viral nature, the Internet is an incredibly powerful tool when it comes to organizing a movement or getting like-minded individuals together for a common cause and/or purpose.

    The idea behind crowd sourcing/funding is quite simple. Because of the connectivity of the Internet, organizing group efforts for projects is so much easier than ever before. Examples of this are all over the place, but one of the most powerful occurred during the Haiti earthquakes and the subsequent crowdsourcing led to an incredibly accurate recreation of up-to-date Haitian maps, which were absolutely necessary after the infrastructure of the country was destroyed.

    In fact, the Haitian crowdsourced map projects is one of the more famous, and perhaps best examples of how effective the power of an Internet crowd is, especially when they have a like-minded goal.

    One of the latest examples of the power of an Internet crowd with a shared goal may not be for something as important as recreating maps of an area that’s been destroyed by a natural disaster, but the end result is fun, if nothing else. What we have, as pointed out by Laughing Squid, is The People of Burning Man book, which was created thanks to the power of an Internet grassroots movement.

    For those who are unaware, Burning Man is a week-long festival that takes place in the Nevada desert. The attendees, for lack of a better term, are an example of the freaks Whodini was referring to in their timeless song, “The Freaks Come Out At Night,” and that is meant as a compliment.

    In the case of the Burning Man “picture book,” the term “crowd funding” comes into play. When the concept was initially floated, it was shot down because of the sensitive nature of the content. For an example, just do a Google Image Search for “Burning Man” and you’ll see why some publishers were unwilling to go with project. Undeterred, the book’s creators went straight to the Burning Man community, via the Internet, of course, and because of their efforts, we now have an awesome book of images that does a great job of capturing different aspects of the attendees.

    The book’s site has more, and it provides a perfect description of how crowd funding works:

    This project was shown around to all the main photo-book publishers by a seasoned agent. The publishers all said “no.” They also asked to keep their copies! Despite their own interest, they said the content was too extreme, and that here would not be enough demand. It became clear that we were asking the establishment to publish something that was largely anti-establishment. So we appealed to the community, asking for enough funds to do the printing. Within 15 days, several hundred people had pledged their support, already totalling the full amount. By the time the funding period was complete, the community had contributed well over the amount for which we had asked. This proved that there was a lot of demand and support for the project, and it enabled us to do a larger print run of a book of good length and quality. This print run exists thanks to the support of over 500 fantastically wonderful human beings, whose names are all listed in these back pages.

    While there are some people, the kind of folks who might comment on Fox articles about atheists, who would probably disapprove of the images and the people in them, the book does a great job of showing the world the United States is not just a nation of consumerists who are largely apathetic to anything outside of their bubble.

    To commemorate the book’s release, there’s a highlight/trailer video of what you can expect from the images. It’s a tad NSFW, due to brief nudity, but even the video itself is a testament to fantastic user-generated content:


    After watching that, one thing’s for sure: I have to attend at least one Burning Man festival before I expire.

    What are some other examples of Internet grassroots movement you can think of? Does the clean up of Vancouver following the Stanley Cup Finals count? Let us know in the comments.