Building community in your area? Check out the newly-launched Community Organizers Handbook! Everything you need to start and grow a NetSquared Local group or any other community-powered program.
FreePledge is a young for-profit social venture that aims to help nonprofits tap into the Internet and technologies.
FreePledge has leveraged the power of growing e-commerce market to empower nonprofit organizations.
Users go through FreePledge for their online shopping, they pay exactly the same price as they would otherwise and a percentage of their purchases is donated to the nonprofit of their choice at no cost to them (or to the nonprofit).
Partnered online stores include Amazon, Ebay, Orbitz, shop.com, Target, BestBuy, Apple and many more.
Hey YouTube experts,
Does anyone know if I can change the image that appears as the screenshot before you start a YouTube video? Right now it is a black screen and does not look so great. Does YouTube just automatically pull the first image as the screenshot?
See sample
http://www.savedarfur.org/pages/testpage
thanks!
Hey YouTube experts,
Does anyone know if I can change the image that appears as the screenshot before you start a YouTube video? Right now it is a black screen and does not look so great. Does YouTube just automatically pull the first image as the screenshot?
See sample
(Note: I'll be in the Bay area in October 2006 and could meet face to face.)
Goal: Find the right combination of Web2.0 tools for a volunteer core group to use to help turnout people for a local social-justice event, scheduled in 3 months.
In just one volunteer network, for example, nationally there are 10,000+ local people, already involved in various communities, to mobilize for particular events.
Tools I have so far:
Tools I need:
A local community network and project-oriented collaborative web space. Coordinators first learn to use this at a local face-to-face meeting. Then together for 3 months they utilize it asynchronously to help build participation for a successful event. The website would include simplified workplace e-tools and short videos, appropriate for busy volunteers.
Its purpose is social facilitation: to encourage people to perform better at simple tasks when they know they're observing one another. Tasks include extending personal invitations to attend the event, listening and engaging others to participate based on their particular interests and gifts. See: 12 Guiding Principles of Community Engagement.
WhizSpark invitation websites produce Excel spreadsheets. I want to mash up and report invitations sent, etc. graphically in the collaborative web space for others to see. Bar charts and a campaign thermometer would help build campaign momentum by representing:
Event invitations sent so far
Simplified, volunteer-appropriate features in collaborative web space might also facilitate:
Today there is a downward spiral of civic apathy. Our national stockpile of social capital -- our reserve of personal bonds and fellowship -- is seriously depleted. We need democratic social-capital strategies like this to enable busy people to act bettertogether.
There's also a market for such event-organizing tools. Example: school reunions. But on this wetpaint.com High-School reunion wiki notice the last comment: Poor planning.
Web2.0 tools could help facilitate more effectively-planned events by supporting grassroots coordinators online to engage and mobilize busy people.
Mac Johnson psmcovky at usa.net
New Richmond, Ohio (Cincinnati area)
"...Remember me as a drum major for justice." -- Martin Luther King Jr.
The fight for NET NEUTRALITY came to a head Friday when both Reblicans and Democrats caved in to big telecom interests.
This attack on net neutrality will have grave implications for our work.I need everyone here to educate themselves and then educate everyone else they know in very short order.
We need to flood Congress with the message:
DEFEND NET NEUTRALITY
Please pass this on:
http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=254287603318550794&q=net+neutrality
A simple explanation:
http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-1333633970451715603&q=net+neutr...
The coalition (please join!)
savetheinternet.com
This is one of those dry but critical issues. We really need everyone to take a minute.
All of the plans we have here are seriously in jeopardy.
Thanks for the time spent reading this,
Cityzen Jane
cityzenjane1 (at) yahoo (dot) com
The coalition (please join!)
savetheinternet.com
www.nabuur.com is a new concept in people-to-people global citizenship. The world is a global village and Nabuur facilitates contact among the neighbours.Nabuur builds virtual neighbourhoods around local communities in developing countries, to assist the latter to deal with their problems in their own terms. It links people in third world communities with their Neighbours on the internet. The locals say what they need, the virtual village helps them to find their future.
The characteristic features of NABUUR.COM are:
• Person to person contact, no bureaucracy between the local community and persons who assist
• The local community is in the lead. It is not thematic; they determine what needs to be done.
• It is not about giving money but about jointly working towards solutions
• It is transparent; the progress is visible to all
• Everyone can contribute, not just experts. What is needed is time, contacts, know-how, tools, manpower
After careful preparation NABUUR.COM is ready to expand. The basic tools, procedures and systems are in place. 75 local communities now take part. 200 local communities will be served by the end of 2006, 1000 by the end of 2007, many more after that.
Background.
There is no shortage of resources to assist Local Communities in their daily struggle. But, as William J. Clinton says, we do not have the systems to respond in a comprehensive way. Ngo’s, corporations and governments are all hierarchies and can therefore only deal with a limited number of projects. What is needed is something complementary, that can tap into the huge reservoir of resources in a self organizing way.The massive popularity of wireless networking has caused equipment costs to continually plummet, while equipment capabilities continue to increase. By applying this technology in areas that are badly in need of critical communications infrastructure, more people can be brought online than ever before, in less time, for very little cost. The authors hope to not only convince you that this is possible, but also show how they have made such networks work, and to give you the information and tools you need to start a network project in your local community.
The material is available as a freely downloadable PDF, a paperback bound book available for purchase, and on the collaborative wiki. Contributions via the wiki are encouraged.
Uppity Wisconsin is an attempt at building a collaborative on-line web presence to promote progressive ideas in Wisconsin Politics. This is a new site (based on the Drupal CMS). It uses a combination of incoming and outgoing RSS, Blogs, Video, and email for communications.
Uppity Wisconsin is currently looking for authors and contributors of all kinds. The current challenge is to find enough contributors to build a vibrant community.
MobileActive is a global network of organizations, technologists, organizers, and activists who are using mobile phones in their social change work.
Mobile phones have emerged as a campaign organizing tool across traditional socio-economic and cultural boundaries. Mobile phone campaigns have swung elections through innovative get-out-the-vote activities, have been used to ensure impartial elections through monitoring, have resulted in massive collective action to free political prisoners, and are being used in public health strategies.
Yet, while there is significant innovation all over the world, there is little aggregation of lessons learned from these campaigns and activities that is being collected and aggregated by civil society practitioners for their peers.
MobileActive seeks to better understand the strengths and limits of the medium, available technologies for campaigners, share lessons learned, feature campaign examples and tech tools so to increase activists’ ability to organize our constituencies with this new technology.
MobileActive 2005 convened in Toronto to bring together, for the first time, activists from around the world to explore the use of mobile phones in civic action campaigns. The MobileActive community and web site is an aggregation of the learnings from this convergence, stories from participants and their projects, and resources for activists interested in using mobiles in their campaigns.
MobileActive is now growing the network of mobile activists, to share knowledge and skills, and to provide a peer network, training, and resources to those interested in exploring mobile phones in their civic engagagement, mobilization, and civic action campaigns.
If you used mobiles in your campaign, please share your story at http://www.mobileactive.org! If you need resources, let us know! And if you want to join this growing network of activists from around the globe, profile yourself: http://www.mobileactive.org/profile
Welcome to MobileActive - http://www.mobileactive.org
The Freedom Toaster is a free vending machine/kiosk that dispenses open source software burned to CD or DVD in locations throughout South Africa.
NetSquared Newsletters:
>>Subscribe to NetSquared News and other email updates.
NetSquared Community Blog:
>> Subscribe to the Community Blog RSS feed.
>> Subscribe to the Community Blog comments RSS feed.