Patrick Meier: Towards a Match.com for Economic Resilience in a Crisis-Stricken World

Advanced Cyber/IO, Civil Society, Collaboration Zones, Geospatial, IO Deeds of Peace, Key Players, Knowledge, Liberation Technology, Mobile, Policies
Patrick Meier

Towards a Match.com for Economic Resilience in a Crisis-Stricken World

So that’s what he’s been up to! My good friend and mentor Ken Banks of Kiwanja fame has just launched a very interesting initiative entitled “Means of Exchange“. Ken wants to democratize opportunities for radical economic self-sufficiency and thus render local communities more resilient to exogenous shocks. “I’ve been taking an increasing interest in economic resilience,” writes Ken, “particularly how technology might help buffer local communities from global economic down-turns. Ironically, since I started my research the world has entered a period of growing economic uncertainty. The causes–although fascinating–don’t so much interest me, more the response at local, grassroots level.”

Photo at Source

To say that Ken’s ideas directly resonate with my ideals would be a huge understatement. My iRevolution blog is currently in its fifth year of production and as the About page explains, “This blog features short thought pieces on how innovation and technology are revolutionizing the power of the individual through radical self-sufficiency, self-determination, independence, survival and resilience.” I’m incredibly excited by Ken’s new initiative. He quotes this excellent comment by Calvin Coolidge, which really hits home:

“We pay too little attention to the reserve power of the people to take care of themselves. We are too solicitous for government intervention, on the theory, first, that the people themselves are helpless, and second, that the government has superior capacity for action. Often times both of these conclusions are wrong.”

I have written many a blog post on this very people-centered notion as applied to crisis early warning and humanitarian response. Hence my pitch two years ago for a Match.com applied to humanitarian relief. Take this blog post, for example: “The Crowd is Always There: A Marketplace for Crowdsourcing Crisis Response.” But Ken is not just advocating for a “Match.com for Economic Resilience,” he is also building the infrastructure to make it happen: “A number of apps to support this work are planned for rollout during the year, with the first due for release in summer 2012.”

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Worth a Look: Top Books on Integrity at Amazon

Cultural Intelligence, Ethics

2009 Integrity: The Courage to Meet the Demands of Reality

For Cloud, an author, clinical psychologist and corporate consultant, integrity is more than just a person's ethics and morals. The French and Latin meanings of the word hint at its origins, “that the whole thing is working well, undivided, integrated, intact and uncorrupted.” Achieving this “wholeness” requires the development of six character traits (creates trust, unafraid of reality, results-oriented, solves “negative realities,” causes growth and finds meaning in life) which Cloud examines in great detail.

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Michel Bauwens: Indignados are (not so) silently gaining strength

Advanced Cyber/IO, Civil Society, Cultural Intelligence, Ethics, IO Deeds of Peace
Michel Bauwens

Despite appearances, Indignados are (not so) silently gaining strength

The 15-M movement has gone beyond protest: it has succeeded in altering the collective imagination and the political atmosphere at its very roots. It has generated a process of re-politicization of society. The agenda of actions has expanded and been radicalized: now we do not only occupy the squares, but we are taking back the public spaces in our own neighborhoods. We stop evictions. We crowd-fund our initiatives. We bring legal actions against bankers. We build our own parallel networks of social support. Does this show a weakened movement, running out of strength? Or does it rather show a dynamic movement, working in the underground on a silent revolution?

Far from losing strength, decentralization has allowed 15-M to become ever more dynamic, writes Martha Sanchez:

“Is the 15-M movement going invisible? Or is it rather gaining strength in the ‘underground’? The mainstream media keep claiming that the indignados have lost support since last year, that its only success is its ability to bring people together on special dates. Spanish newspaper El País concluded in May 2012 that, one year after the birth of the movement, popular support and sympathy for the indignados had decreased around 13% among the Spanish population, despite the massive mobilizations that took place from the 12th until the 15th of May, commemorating the anniversary of the movement. ABC opened its edition of May 15 stating that “the indignados movement shows less strength on their anniversary.” But the media misses the point. In reality, rather than losing strength, the movement has become stronger, more organized, better coordinated, and supported by the commitment of hundreds of people.

The decentralization of the movement

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Patrick Meier: Muḥammad ibn Mūsā al-Khwārizmī: An Update from the Qatar Computing Research Institute

Earth Intelligence
Patrick Meier

EXTRACT:

This brings me to the Qatar (Foundation) Computing Research Institute (QCRI), which was almost called the al-Khwārizmī Computing Research Institute. I joined QCRI exactly two weeks ago as Director of Social Innovation. My first impression? QCRI is Doha's “House of Whizzkids”. The team is young, dynamic, international and super smart. I'm already working on several exploratory research and development (R&D) projects that could potentially lead to initial prototypes by the end of the year. These have to do with the application of social computing and big data analysis for humanitarian response. So I've been in touch with several colleagues at the United Nations (UN) Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) to bounce these early ideas off and am thrilled that all responses thus far have been very positive.

My QCRI colleagues and I are also looking into collaborative platforms for  “smart microtasking” which may be useful for the Digital Humanitarian Network. In addition, we're just starting to explore potential solutions for quantifying veracity in social media, a rather non-trivial problem as Dr. Prossinger would often say with a sly smile vis-a-vis NP-hard problems. In terms of partnership building, I will be in New York, DC and Boston next month for official meetings with the UN, World Bank and MIT to explore possible collaborations on specific projects. The team in Doha is particularly strong on data analytics, social computing, data cleaning, machine learning and translation. In fact, most of the whizzkids here come from very impressive track records with Microsoft, Yahoo, Ivy Leagues, etc. So I'm excited by the potential.

Read full article with photos.

DefDog: Can Crowd-Sourcing Save the US Economy?

Collective Intelligence, Commercial Intelligence
DefDog

Infographic – Can Crowdfunding Save The U.S. Economy?

About Rock The Post. Rock The Post is a crowdfunding website designed to fund small businesses, entrepreneurs, and nonprofits. It is the ideal tool for entrepreneurs to leverage networks, reach out to new contacts, and fill in the missing pieces of their projects. Rock the Post provides budding businesses with the means necessary to amass resources and flourish.

Click on Image to Enlarge

 

Worth a Look: EarthAccounting.com

Earth Intelligence, Worth A Look

WHAT IF:

. Consumers had a tool to tell quickly and easily tell, at the time of purchase, if the product or production methods resulted in significant adverse environmental or social impact?

. The complex information of this impact could be presented by as a scoring based personalized set of preferences?

. People finally had an economic tool which through purchase would compel corporate practices toward sustainability not just profit?

This website contains a recently patented tool called the Universal Ecolabel which can perform all these functions and more. It even allows the individual consumer to monitor his total personal/family environmental footprint over time.

In coming months interactive website activities are envisioned that will provide consumers the opportunity to educate themselves and others as well as contribute to a growing body of sustainability knowledge

Visit Site.

Tip of the Hat to Medard Gabel.

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