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Salesforce.com To Review Controversial Hackathon Win

itwbennett writes "Adding to the growing sentiment that prizes ruin hackathons, Salesforce.com has come under fire from critics who say the hackathon the company held at its Dreamforce conference was judged unfairly. Not long after the $1 million prize was handed to Upshot for a mobile app that let users to create and edit Salesforce.com reports, other contestants raised allegations of unfairness. Among the complaints: That Upshot's CTO Thomas Kim had demoed a similar-sounding application a couple of weeks before Oct. 25 cutoff; that Kim is a former Salesforce.com employee (although that isn't in violation of the rules); and that their own entries weren't evaluated by judges at all. Salesforce CEO Marc Benioff is now promising a thorough investigation of the hackathon."

3 of 34 comments (clear)

  1. Re:giving 1 million to your buddies by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Here is the article I read about this fiasco yesterday. Well written from the point of one of the entries: https://medium.com/hackers-and-hacking/b839268fb82d

    Her final point is interesting:

    "If I was Salesforce, I’d be pissed an employee was so bad at his job he left a gaping hole in the product, then he leaves and starts a company that conveniently fills that hole? Yet, Salesforce gives him a million dollars. Either Salesforce is an investor in Upshot, or they’re dumb."

  2. Burned out by nightsky30 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    After experiencing a few hackathons and seeing people submit re-titled pre-existing apps when the rules state they should be creating the app that day from scratch, I'm burned out. It shouldn't be a cheating contest. It arguably shouldn't be a contest at all. Hackathons are about collaboration, creation, and innovation.

  3. prizes are not the problem by schneidafunk · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Prizes don't ruin hackathons, cheating does.

    --
    Some people die at 25 and aren't buried until 75. -Benjamin Franklin