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Reverse BountyShort description: A "reverse bounty" is a concept I was discussing at the 2005 Drupal conference. Bounties are a fairly well known concept within the open source world: users post bounties in order that bugs get fixed or features get added. The main issue with this is that it is user driven, and end users often don't have any concept of how easy or hard something is to implement -- or even what might be possible given the platform. Reverse bounties are instead posted by developers. It is an idea and feature description of something that the developer actually wants to work on, along with the money required. The developer knows that it can be done, knows what the platform can do, and has the skills to actually implement it. The money allows them to dedicate time to actually work on it. By Sam Rose at 2007-09-02 14:09 | P2PVenture | Financing | Microfinance | Reputation Management - Trust Scoring | English | Article or whitepaper | bounty | open source software | peerfunding | login or register to post comments | flag this | 52742 reads | 1 point
Prediction toolsShort description: From the page Here are some applets that give you a sense of the kinds of things that Super Crunching can help predict. Use them at your own risk (The lawyer in me feels compelled to emphasize that I make no representation as to their accuracy). By fredericbaud at 2007-09-01 04:46 | Articles and Whitepapers | Prediction Market | English | Research Institute or Sister community | 3 comments | flag this | 53192 reads | 1 point
Business Week: Social Network Hits InvestingShort description: August 2007 By fredericbaud at 2007-08-30 12:40 | Social Trading | Trading | English | Article or whitepaper | login or register to post comments | flag this | 52886 reads | 0 points
StockaliciousShort description: Share Portfolio with other users, compare with the market. Like Covestor and Cakefinancial but without real trading plugin. By Nicolas at 2007-08-28 16:48 | Social Trading | Personal Finance | Trading | English | Company site | login or register to post comments | flag this | 52304 reads | 0 points
StockTickrShort description: Stoctickr lets you share your portfolio with other members, each trying to compete. By Nicolas at 2007-08-28 16:33 | Social Trading | Personal Finance | Trading | English | Company site | trading | login or register to post comments | flag this | 52819 reads | 0 points
TradeKingBy fredericbaud at 2007-08-28 10:28 | Social Trading | Trading | English | Company site | login or register to post comments | flag this | 52932 reads | 0 points
RegenerosityShort description: Quoted from website:
By Sam Rose at 2007-08-27 16:37 | P2PMoney | Articles and Whitepapers | Community Currencies | Personal Finance | Social Trading | Cashless Payments | Community Currencies | Financing | Microfinance | Reputation Management - Trust Scoring | English | Alternative Currency | Company site | gift economy | social enterprise | login or register to post comments | flag this | 52732 reads | 1 point
Meta-MarketsShort description: quoted from website "Meta-Markets has many markets each composed of different values generated in various domains. Markets are open to all members for trading and for offering their own products to public (IPO). In the sale (allocation and pricing) of shares in an IPO, the value of a share comes from its domain. For example, if you issue your Delicious bookmark, your Delicious bookmark's counts is the value. If you issue your Facebook profile, the number of Facebook friends is the value. When you sign up, you get an initial amount money to start your investments. The currency is "buraks", which is the foundation currency of the MIT's Openstudio online creative economy. Meta-Markets is a peer-to-peer market, so you always buy from a person and sell directly to a person. Of course to make profit you buy low and sell high. You set up the price of your stocks and wait for others to buy. If you put the price low people most likely buy it, if you set it high you sell when its worth that much. Watch the changes in the last price, and change your prices accordingly. To IPO your own creative products, you must be the owner of that product in its domain. When you IPO your product, the majority of your product still belongs to you, you open less than 50% shares to public. After the IPO, people buy your shares, and you raise capital. By Sam Rose at 2007-08-27 16:32 | Social Trading | Cashless Payments | Community Currencies | Financing | Microfinance | Prediction Market | Private Capital Markets | Trading | English | Alternative Currency | alternative currency markets | Company site | prediction market | social network analysis | value | login or register to post comments | flag this | 52495 reads | 1 point
SharewiseBy fredericbaud at 2007-08-27 07:26 | Social Trading | Unsorted (yet) | Company site | German | login or register to post comments | flagged | 52183 reads | 0 points
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