Pages:
Author

Topic: Charity Idea, feedback requested (Read 1605 times)

sr. member
Activity: 277
Merit: 250
March 20, 2014, 06:22:52 AM
#23
I think to start, we're just going to do the click-the-button-and-donate-a-few-cents idea.
newbie
Activity: 28
Merit: 0
March 18, 2014, 07:18:54 PM
#21
In a crazy coincidence, I opened my wife's laptop just now and in her browser was a blog post talking about Huggies gamifying the testing process for their products, with a diaper being donated to charity every time a parent goes to their website and does a "game" which is really a product test. Pretty clever, and right along the lines of what we're talking about... 

https://www.huggiestester.com/
sr. member
Activity: 277
Merit: 250
March 18, 2014, 07:06:11 PM
#20
Regarding finding advertisers, you could poach them from Mechanical Turk. Because if they are willing to pay that to random workers on MT who are doing A/B comparison tests for them, with the money going to the MT workers and Amazon, they are certainly willing to pay that to a charity that accomplishes the same task, for the same or less money.

Regarding finding a programmer, can't help you there. I'm pretty good at coming up with the ideas, but I'm pretty clueless when it comes to the programming to get them done. 

Ok, thanks for the help Smiley
newbie
Activity: 28
Merit: 0
March 18, 2014, 06:47:38 PM
#19
Regarding finding advertisers, you could poach them from Mechanical Turk. Because if they are willing to pay that to random workers on MT who are doing A/B comparison tests for them, with the money going to the MT workers and Amazon, they are certainly willing to pay that to a charity that accomplishes the same task, for the same or less money.

Regarding finding a programmer, can't help you there. I'm pretty good at coming up with the ideas, but I'm pretty clueless when it comes to the programming to get them done. 
sr. member
Activity: 277
Merit: 250
March 18, 2014, 06:40:20 PM
#18
Sounds like Franky1 and I are on the same page.

To flesh out the idea some more, A vs. B tests are one of the most basic ways of evaluating competing marketing ideas, so in it's first iteration, it could be a crowdsourced A vs B tester that donates the proceeds from each individual A to B test to charity.

To bring video into the picture, per Franky1's suggestion, you could have an option where the website visitor can watch two different commercials (for Coca Cola, for example), and then say which ad they like better.

A company like Coke gets quite a LOT of value from this, because not only do they find out which commercial is better, they have a fleet of people watching TWO of their commercials in a row.

So, you could definitely donate more than 100 satoshi per click.

If you "gamified" the whole thing, and had badges and points that people could win, people would get addicted to it, and you would earn a lot of money for a good cause. 

I really like the gamification idea! Two things about this:

  • It's pretty difficult to find advertisers to do this. Maybe with a charity companies would be moar generous, but with my faucet I had trouble finding advertisers.
  • I don't think I have the technical ability to do the gamification part (badges/points/leveling up/etc). Do you know of anyone who can help with this?
newbie
Activity: 28
Merit: 0
March 18, 2014, 06:10:53 PM
#17
Sounds like Franky1 and I are on the same page.

To flesh out the idea some more, A vs. B tests are one of the most basic ways of evaluating competing marketing ideas, so in it's first iteration, it could be a crowdsourced A vs B tester that donates the proceeds from each individual A to B test to charity.

To bring video into the picture, per Franky1's suggestion, you could have an option where the website visitor can watch two different commercials (for Coca Cola, for example), and then say which ad they like better.

A company like Coke gets quite a LOT of value from this, because not only do they find out which commercial is better, they have a fleet of people watching TWO of their commercials in a row.

So, you could definitely donate more than 100 satoshi per click.

If you "gamified" the whole thing, and had badges and points that people could win, people would get addicted to it, and you would earn a lot of money for a good cause. 
legendary
Activity: 4410
Merit: 4766
March 18, 2014, 05:53:27 PM
#16
What do you think of the big picture, users click on a button to donate bitcoin?

the reason i mentioned the video advertising is explained better by this:

I like the idea, but I think you should make it more interesting than a button.

Make it so they actually have to perform some very tiny task, like describe a picture in a few words, or say which version of a banner ad they like better.

Then, it is more interesting for the user, potentially even addicting, and you can collect money from the company that benefits from the work.

It would be like a charity version of Mechanical Turk...

More interesting for the user, more viral, and more money for the charity!
newbie
Activity: 28
Merit: 0
March 18, 2014, 04:47:56 PM
#15
I like the idea, but I think you should make it more interesting than a button.

Make it so they actually have to perform some very tiny task, like describe a picture in a few words, or say which version of a banner ad they like better.

Then, it is more interesting for the user, potentially even addicting, and you can collect money from the company that benefits from the work.

It would be like a charity version of Mechanical Turk...

More interesting for the user, more viral, and more money for the charity!
sr. member
Activity: 277
Merit: 250
March 18, 2014, 04:37:54 PM
#14
video adverts.

where a user has to watch a video advert fully, to then have the advert revenue donated to a cause.

examples:
abitback
freedigitalmoney

Interesting... I'll keep it in mind, thanks Smiley

What do you think of the big picture, users click on a button to donate bitcoin?
legendary
Activity: 4410
Merit: 4766
March 18, 2014, 12:37:24 PM
#13
video adverts.

where a user has to watch a video advert fully, to then have the advert revenue donated to a cause.

examples:
abitback
freedigitalmoney
sr. member
Activity: 277
Merit: 250
March 18, 2014, 07:11:02 AM
#12
Anyone else have any ideas? Smiley
sr. member
Activity: 277
Merit: 250
March 17, 2014, 07:15:46 PM
#11
No, you don't get the concept Tongue

The user doesn't pay a dime. All they need to do is press the button. The sponsors/donations pay for the BTC0.01 donation.
Ah okay, I see, I'm sorry.

I'm afraid I have no positive feedback on this idea now I understand it, but just wanted to apologise for misunderstanding you.
It's ok Smiley If the site were to be created, would you visit it and press the button?
full member
Activity: 154
Merit: 100
March 17, 2014, 06:51:35 PM
#10
No, you don't get the concept Tongue

The user doesn't pay a dime. All they need to do is press the button. The sponsors/donations pay for the BTC0.01 donation.
Ah okay, I see, I'm sorry.

I'm afraid I have no positive feedback on this idea now I understand it, but just wanted to apologise for misunderstanding you.
sr. member
Activity: 277
Merit: 250
March 17, 2014, 06:05:34 PM
#9
The minimum standard transaction is 5430 satoshis (BTC0.0000543).
No, the way we'd do it is, every time the button is clicked, a text file goes up a certain amount (for example, if it goes up by .003 every time, and it was at .005, and someone clicks it, it goes up to .008).
How will your web site enforce that I actually have a bitcoin balance large enough to pledge BTC0.003?

Let's say I have clicked your button 10 times, thus owe you BTC0.03. How and when does that get sent from me to your site?

Wouldn't a sort of Flattr-but-with-bitcoins approach work a lot better?
No, you don't get the concept Tongue

The user doesn't pay a dime. All they need to do is press the button. The sponsors/donations pay for the BTC0.01 donation.
full member
Activity: 154
Merit: 100
March 17, 2014, 05:34:25 PM
#8
The minimum standard transaction is 5430 satoshis (BTC0.0000543).
No, the way we'd do it is, every time the button is clicked, a text file goes up a certain amount (for example, if it goes up by .003 every time, and it was at .005, and someone clicks it, it goes up to .008).
How will your web site enforce that I actually have a bitcoin balance large enough to pledge BTC0.003?

Let's say I have clicked your button 10 times, thus owe you BTC0.03. How and when does that get sent from me to your site?

Wouldn't a sort of Flattr-but-with-bitcoins approach work a lot better?
sr. member
Activity: 277
Merit: 250
March 17, 2014, 05:17:57 PM
#7

1) cookies are not a good dietary food product for starving people.

You're right, we will likely end up doing sandwiches or something.
The minimum standard transaction is 5430 satoshis (BTC0.0000543).

...

This service in itself sounds more useful than the "click on a button to donate a tiny tiny fraction of a $ in cryptocurrency to a charity" idea IMHO.
No, the way we'd do it is, every time the button is clicked, a text file goes up a certain amount (for example, if it goes up by .003 every time, and it was at .005, and someone clicks it, it goes up to .008). The donation payments will be sent out manually, and the counter will be reset once the payment is sent out.
I'm not sure what you mean by your last line... what service?

I think it is a great idea, but:

1. Donate more than $0.000001 per click. $1 per click is more like it, but you would need to prevent automated clicking.
2. Find big donors that would also spend some marketing budget to publicize your site.
3. Sign up charities to accept bitcoins from your site and publicize your site.
I think $1 is stretching it, but yes I agree that $0.000001 per click is too little. Automated clicking would be prevented by allowing a certain IP address to click the button once every hour or so.

Thanks for the feedback everyone Smiley
legendary
Activity: 4466
Merit: 3391
March 16, 2014, 11:28:03 PM
#6
I think it is a great idea, but:

1. Donate more than $0.000001 per click. $1 per click is more like it, but you would need to prevent automated clicking.
2. Find big donors that would also spend some marketing budget to publicize your site.
3. Sign up charities to accept bitcoins from your site and publicize your site.
full member
Activity: 154
Merit: 100
March 16, 2014, 09:26:25 PM
#5
The minimum standard transaction is 5430 satoshis (BTC0.0000543).

A person trying to do a 100 satoshi transaction would most likely have it rejected by their wallet software to protect the user.

Assuming they run a custom wallet that allows such a transaction to be created, the transaction would most likely be rejected by all of the peers that the wallet sends it to.

Assuming that the wallet is instructed to send the non-standard transaction to at least one custom node that knows to accept it, those accepting nodes would have to mine a block to includes that transaction.

In short the barriers to getting such a transaction distributed are high.

Even at 5430 satoshis, this is below the mBTC0.1 minimum fee. Such a transaction would be standard, but unlikely to be accepted by a miner, so may never reach your project.

So at minimum your idea calls for users to send mBTC0.101 out of which mBTC0.1 goes to the miners and mBTC0.001 goes to your project.

This seems like too much loss to transaction fees.

Also the mechanism of clicking a button on a web page and having that automatically send a bitcoin payment does not currently exist and probably should never exist as it seems incredibly insecure.

Note that Bitcoin is not really designed for micropayments in the way you describe. It may be possible for some service to be created that holds a wallet of a small number of bitcoins, manages the micropayments and settles up with the recipients at a later date in a single transaction instead of a bazillion tiny ones.

(This will have the same centralisation problems we see today with failing exchanges and other services, so solutions to that problem will need to be applied here too.)

This service in itself sounds more useful than the "click on a button to donate a tiny tiny fraction of a $ in cryptocurrency to a charity" idea IMHO.
legendary
Activity: 4410
Merit: 4766
March 16, 2014, 08:04:21 PM
#4
Our first project is actually (us, the creators of the charity) baking cookies for homeless Philadelphians, so there is no middleman. Depending on how the first project goes, we may or may not continue to do the work ourselves.

And actually, over 90% of Red Cross funding goes towards its services: http://www.charitynavigator.org/index.cfm?bay=search.summary&orgid=3277#.UyYtFq1dWZ4

Thanks for the feedback Smiley

1) cookies are not a good dietary food product for starving people.
2) research properly, red cross gives less then 90% (dont believe the PR story they pass to the press. read the accounts)

ok here is one example page 477 of http://www.icrc.org/eng/assets/files/annual-report/icrc-annual-report-2012.pdf
OPERATING INCOME
Contributions 1,013,359
Total Operating income 1,013,359

OPERATING EXPENDITURE
Staff-related costs -526,771
Mission costs -59,577
Rentals -104,248
Sub-contracted maintenance -36,840

Purchase of goods and materials -202,034
Financial assistance -16,089
General expenditure -76,269

Depreciation -26,633
Total Operating expenditure -1,048,461

ok so the green are more of what id call funds being used for those in need (although general expenditure is a gray area)
now the stuff i left in black, such as staff wages which accounts for over 50% of donations(blue)... now that is the point i am making.

so roughly 50% goes to pay wages.. 30% goes to goodwill causes and 20% is to cover the mortgages, leases and repairs of all the red cross shops/HQ's and other buildings..

again.. roughly 30% goes to goodwill causes.

so please do research on any non profit you advertise and try to show the "degree's of separation" between donators and frontline people in need, aswell as a accurate % of what reaches frontline people in need.
Pages:
Jump to: