Philanthropy For Hackers
An anonymous reader writes: Sean Parker, co-founder of Napster and the first president of Facebook, was part of a generation of geeks who rode the dot-com boom to financial success. Over the past two decades, that population has dramatically increased, and former hackers are carving out spots as leaders of industry. In the Wall Street Journal, Parker has posted advice for how the hacker elite can approach philanthropy. He points out that they're already bringing a level of strategy and efficacy to charity work that hasn't been seen before. "These budding philanthropists want metrics and analytic tools comparable to the dashboards, like Mixpanel, that power their software products. They want to interact directly with the scientists, field workers and academics whose ideas power the philanthropic world but who have traditionally been hidden away in a backroom somewhere, shielded from their beneficiaries by so-called development officers." One thing he advises is keeping away from large charity organizations, which largely exist to keep themselves going. He also suggests getting actively involved with the political process, even if such organizations are often distasteful.
I love my royal duty to post first!
In general, I think the point about large charities being mostly about sustaining themselves is correct. However, they have connections that can often make them the only (albeit imperfect) organizations that can mobilize relief after major disasters. Further, some specific large charities provide unique services that smaller organizations, however well run, cannot replicate. An example is the Red Cross and their monitoring of prisoners of war. I also greatly respect one or two large charities. Médecins Sans Frontières (Doctors Without Borders) does tremendous work, such as fighting the ebola outbreak for months before the WHO did anything effective.. Generalizations can have limited validity, but must not be taken too far
Too bad all that money didn't buy these posers any clues.
Hackers or hacks?
How many of those "success" stories exist because they had the brilliance to do something right again and again, instead of just once, then "ride the wave" of that early success?
Bill Gates, as much as I hate the guy and his legacy, did something right with Microsoft not just a few times, but for decades. Same for Steve Jobs and Google's founders.
Facebook? Other than the fact that it's very popular it brings very little innovation, they don't have any other products, nothing outside their comfort zone. They live in their tiny shell feeding off the early success of being the biggest social network.
Wow! A $600 million gift is very impressive but most of us are not in that "Internet baron" class... yet! We all hope we get there I'm sure. If you're interested in a way to commit to philanthropic action now for when you make it big later, then check out www.thefounderspledge.org.
"Hackers share certain values: an antiestablishment bias, a belief in radical transparency, a nose for sniffing out vulnerabilities in systems..."
Calling BS
Grassroots Mixpanel much?
if your a sell out and ya know it raise your hands
if your a sell out and ya know it raise your hands
if your a sell out and y aknow it and ya really want to show it clap your hands
http://www.theatlantic.com/bus...
...I obey the laws of physics....
Start by getting the government out of philanthropy and other benevolence. They suck at it, but insist on spending tax-dollars on it anyway.
But be careful — if you find something, that seems useful, the government may decide to impose it on everyone (at gun-point, which is how government does everything.)
Of course, the Statists would lament:
but don't fall for it. First of all, such statements are self-contradicting — because it is exactly the money from billionaires, that the government spends on "the country's neediest" even when it is not shut down. Top 20% of the earners pay 84% of the income tax today... But, when a philanthropist chooses to spend his money this way, it is noble and legal, whereas for the government it is a patently unconstitutional thing to do:
Yes, boys and girls, "helping the needy" is just as illegal for the state to do as is eavesdropping on your communications or searching your house without a warrant...
In Soviet Washington the swamp drains you.
Please don't generalize.
I work for a worldwide mega-charity that specializes in providing local social services, local/regional/national/multinational disaster relief, war/refugee assistance, and more. The organization has been around for about 150 years and its motivation is the same today as when it was founded: to show God's love by treating those in need with the compassion of Christ (these are my words, not the organization's).
Some of you have probably guessed which organization I work for, but that's not important - the important thing is not to generalize.
He got lucky, giving other people's products away for free. If anyone tried that now they'd be sued into oblivion and spend significant time in prison.
The article suggests most successful/philanthropic hackers want to save the world via liberal means. Some hackers are pretty extreme on the "right wing" of things.
instead of charity. A tiny sliver of knowledge will be added to science. No, science will not fill a hungry belly or directly reduce any suffering. But, it will work slowly, steadily, and indirectly to crush the ignorance that is responsible for most of that.
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