3. Peer Production and Sharing: Difference between revisions
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[[Table | ↑ [[Table of Contents]]<br /> | ||
← [[2. Some Basic Economics of Information Production and Innovation|Chapter 2]] | [[4. The Economics of Social Production|Chapter 4]] → | |||
== | == Content == | ||
= | * [http://www.benkler.org/Benkler_Wealth_Of_Networks_Chapter_3.pdf Full text (PDF)]=== | ||
* [[Commentary Chapter 3|Commentary (wiki)]] | |||
== | ==Summary== | ||
Revision as of 00:24, 10 August 2006
↑ Table of Contents
← Chapter 2 | Chapter 4 →
Content
Summary
Sources
Sources cited in the chapter
Other relevant readings
Case Studies
Supporting examples
- Amazon Mechanical Turk
- Could be considered micro-outsourcing, allows API access to human effort. Also see Turkwatch for an overview of recent MTurk projects
Counter-examples
Indeterminate Examples (in progress)
- Mycroft
- UCB iSchool research project, a generalization of ClickWorkers by utilizing a few seconds of web surfer's abilities to collaboratively solve large problems, without leaving the page. Currently focusing on Wikipedia image tagging and Project Gutenberg.