About Me

Crowdsourcing: A Definition

  • I like to use two definitions for crowdsourcing:

    The White Paper Version: Crowdsourcing is the act of taking a job traditionally performed by a designated agent (usually an employee) and outsourcing it to an undefined, generally large group of people in the form of an open call.

    The Soundbyte Version: The application of Open Source principles to fields outside of software.

Crowdsourcing in the News

  • July 27, 2008: The Washington Post
    While I was on vacation The Post's Jane Black dropped a line to ask me what I thought about crowdsourcing in restaurants. Naturally, I replied that I don't think about crowdsourcing in restaurants. In fact, I'm always asked when crowdsourcing doesn't work, and I've tended to use just such retail examples as this. After all, do you really want the crowd making your tofu chili? This sure shows my lack of imagination. Turns out that a few entrepreneurial restaurateurs are doing just this. Black's piece made A1 in yesterday's paper.
  • March 25, 2007: New York Times and NPR's On the Media
    Another twofer: First, in yesterday's Times Jason Pontin takes a first-hand look at Mechanical Turk, ChaCha.com and Jeff Bezos' notion of "artificial artifical intelligence." His experience is less than satisfactory, and a reminder that not everything should be crowdsourced.

    My favorite NPR show, On the Media, interviews TPM Muckraker's Paul Kiel about the site's recent experiment in crowdsourcing. Muckraker asked its readers to parse the 3,000 emails pertaining to the firing of federal prosecutors that Dept. of Justice released last week. Within hours Muckraker readers were ferreting out compromising passages, some of which led to news leads for MSM pubs, further evidence that the crowd has a promising future in performing investigative functions. Shady politicians (is that phrase redundant?) beware.
  • March 19, 2007: New York Times and Detroit Free Press
    Today's a twofer: The New York Times' David Carr writes about Assignment Zero in his column, "The Media Equation." I edited David a few times at the now defunct Inside.com (It shined brightly but briefly). If memory serves, he could recall obscure circulation figures on certain newspapers and magazines from memory. No mean media critic, in other words. So I was elated to see him give Assignment Zero a cautiously optimistic treatment.

    Crowdsourcing also made the Detroit Free Press today, where religion writer David Crumm writes about how theologians and pastors are using the model to let their congregations "shape a church's worship and programs." I haven't followed the crowdsourcing in religion angle as much as I'd like, and this is a great introduction to the subject.
  • March 16, 2007: Radio: WNYC - Crowdsourcing and Music
    Does user-generated content threaten the recording industry? That presumes there's still a recording industry to speak of. I'm kidding—kinda. But CD sales get more and more anemic and companies building businesses out of unknown bands—call it music by the crowd—look more and more interesting (and viable) all the time. Yesterday I was on one of my favorite WNYC shows, "Soundcheck" discussing all this and more. Stream or download the show here. You can listen to my segment alone (it runs about 20 minutes), but I recommend you listen to the opening segment on the bizarre-but-intriguing midomi.com. Midomi is a social networking site that allows you to search for music by singing a few bars into a microphone connected to your computer. Soundcheck brought in a trained opera singer to put Midomi's software to the test, with humorous results. American Idol-meets-Myspace-meets-iTunes-meets-voice-recognition-software. That's some mash-up. What will those Stanford smarties dream up next?
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November 09, 2007

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Comments

Alan

Here is a great post from Unit Structures. Although the focus is on beacon, I think the approach and insights apply equally to aspects of CS!

http://chimprawk.blogspot.com/2007/11/facebooks-beacon-and-boundary-states.html

Alan

Alan

Here is a great list. Examples of Intermediary Platforms & Services from Open Innovators.
http://www.openinnovators.net/list-open-innovation-crowdsourcing-examples/

Alan

Alan

Yet another very well researched list:
Social Network Sites: Definition, History, and Scholarship
http://jcmc.indiana.edu/vol13/issue1/boyd.ellison.html

Alan

ankara oto kiralama

Very Nice topic thanx a lot (:

Ryan McKenzie

Hi Jeff
I'd be really interested in joining the crowdsourcing research group when you get it started, please email me if you can extend an invitation. Thanks very much.

Alan

Some interesting commentary about creating un-paid economic value, up-scale hobnobbing as a new trend and bundling tech, data and CS.

Ludo-capitalism and metanomics
http://alexreid.typepad.com/digital_digs/2007/11/ludo-capitalism.html

Social Networking with the Elite
http://www.businessweek.com/innovate/content/nov2007/id20071114_257766.htm

TomTom and Vodafone crowdsource traffic information
http://blogs.ft.com/techblog/2007/11/tomtom-and-voda.html

Alan

Alan

Ten million dollars are up for grabs for crowd-developed, open source software developers. This neatly demonstrates two emerging ways of doing things which will have ramifications far beyond the computer industry.
http://techlun.ch/2007/11/16/google-goes-crowdsourcing-for-an-iphone-killer/

Alan

Threadless up-date:$600,000 to $15 Million in 2007
http://www.businessweek.com/magazine/content/07_48/b4060074.htm

Former UT football player launches Internet startup
An interesting new-media concept, crowdsourcing?:
http://www.voicesheardmedia.com/

Alan

Lena West

I'd like to be part of the crowdsourcing research group and I'd also like to interview you for a major online publication.

Can you shoot me an email?

Thanks,

Lena

Russell Kord

First, congratulations on the safe arrival of your new son. Its quite a while since I shared any thoughts about crowdsourcing with you.

The rants of a year back have been tempered by the reality of dealing with the effects of crowdsourcing
on a daily basis in my small stockphoto production business.

A year or more down the road the implosion of stock photo prices has not yet happened. The millions of potential stock shooters working for nothing hav'nt appeared. Photography created by crowdsourcers has been predictable and adequate at best. There is a low price market for it, and some money to be made by those doing the algromeration. But it has'nt put me out of business. Chiefly because the quality just is'nt there.


I wonder if it ever will be? What will the place of the enthusiastic amateur be in the stock photo business?
In the end will new talent migrate out of crowdsourcing for peanuts as soon as it is recognized, leaving the whole sector as a bargain basement of adequate images?

Maybe not enough time has passed to see the full extent of crowdsourcing and how deep are the long term effects of this process.

For now the iStockers are still out there shooting images for a buck, but on the eve of the deepest recession the USA has seen in half a century or more, the sky has not fallen in on professional stock photographers.

A deep long lasting recession should see companies cut advertising and/or R&D budgets, thereby revealing further insights into crowdsourcing's likely place in
our little planet's economy.

Maybe then we'll see crowdsourcing take over the world.

Or not.

Alan

158,000 strong crowd expected to rank system.
PaGaLGuY.com launches India's Largest B-school Rankings initiative

http://www.indiaprwire.com/pressrelease/education/200711215753.htm

Alan

Daren C. Brabham

Good to hear from you again, Russell.

You have a citation in my forthcoming article, too:

"In other ways, though, crowdsourcing necessarily involves casualties, as any shift in production will. iStockphoto, for instance, has crippled long-time stock photographers, whose prices—hundreds or thousands of dollars for image rights—were necessary to cover the cost of their equipment, travel, and film processing. As photographer Russell Kord laments on the crowdsourcing blog, “digital cameras have taken away any skill necessary to expose a decent image, composition is a matter of opinion, and distribution [e.g., through iStockphoto] is now cheap and easy” (Howe, 2006c, Comments section, 43). Because of this willingness for amateur photographers to “dump” their work on iStockphoto for next to nothing, professional stock photographers are becoming obsolete. The tragic tale in this loss of jobs is the last tail of an increasing obsolescence of the industrial economy as a whole, and the diffusion of technology (like the digital camera), spread of expert knowledge (via the Web), and our discovery of value in amateurs can be seen as refreshing and liberating in its own way. On the micro-level, crowdsourcing is ruining careers. On the macro-level, though, crowdsourcing is reconnecting workers with their work and taming the giants of big business by reviving the importance of the consumer in the design process. "

Alan

Here is an international list of peer to peer money lending/borrowing sites. It looks like this trend is blossoming. Of course we all know that money will never grow on trees! Alan
• Smava
• elolly.de
• PPdai
• Circle Lending
• Lendary
• Boober
• CommunityLend
• Peermint
• Lending Club
• Wiseclerk.com
• Fairrates
• Nexx
• GlobeFunder

Alan

Here is a paper worth looking at:
Social Network Sites: Definition, History, and Scholarship by Danah Boyd.
http://jcmc.indiana.edu/vol13/issue1/boyd.ellison.html

“Just in case” you have not caught this series on CS:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1DAeChPPxME

And here is an interesting look at social networks in the work place. What would the chart look like for CS?
http://collabatwork.com/?p=83

Is Google CS?
http://www.google.com/experimental/a840e102.html

Read/Write Web thinks not!
http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/voting_experiment_google_sneez.php

Alan

LukePDQ

Hey Jeff.
Happy New Year to you and yours.
Just dropped by to see what's happening here.
I would definitely be interesting joining the group looking at Nova Spivak's Twine application.
This is going to be a killer app in the business world if it lives up to its promised functionality.
Cheers.

prefabrik evler

I'd like to be part of the crowdsourcing research group and I'd also like to interview you for a major online publication.

http://www.aryol.com.tr/ofisler.html

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The Trailer


  • Click here to watch the Crowdsourcing trailer and then pass it on.

Events

  • Tuesday, September 2, 7:30 PM
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    Thursday, Sept. 4, 7:30 PM
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The Rise of Crowdsourcing

  • Read the original article about crowdsourcing, published in the June, 2006 issue of Wired Magazine.