W23 – 2 Jan 2024 – UPDATE 2 – Platform

When people think of charity they normally think of donations. It is cool if people search for the causes they want to donate and add it to their wish list and then a company pays the donation for them. So people think “If I could I would donate to this cause” and then a company says I will do it for you. People can work on designs, etc. to be used for specific social, and charitable causes and then a company says I will provide the funds for that. That person is effectively an entrepreneur and earns money. However, the project is intended for charitable causes. The project may involve receivers of the donation as well. So the donor earns money, the donation receiver gets a job for a project that will benefit him/her, and the company which provides the fund advertises itself.


UPDATE 1:

The fundamental aim of this project is to redefine advertisement so that it is integrated into a reputation system. This involves shifting the viewpoint of companies. This shift in perspective is as critical as economic mechanisms and technical issues.

Donors in this project should not donate randomly. They will try to build a donation profile for themselves so that they can receive funds for their projects.

So people actively look for opportunities to donate and build their profiles. Building this profile is a strategic game. People should plan how to construct their profiles.


UPDATE 2:

The social media explained in the submission to Founders is based on the idea that users plan for their social and online activities at the start of each year and modify them repeatedly. This process should be based on curves. For example, there might be predictions for economic situations, etc based on those predictions people plan curves for their profiles. This pushes people to look for social, economic, etc clues to modify their curves. This gives a sense of purpose to their online activities. Currently scrolling updates on social media is mainly purposeless.

This entry was posted in Platform. Bookmark the permalink.