Sun, 22 April 2007 This podcast is a presentation by Ben Rattray, the founder of Change.org at the April 10, 2007 Net Tuesday.
According to the Change.org site:
Change.org aims to transform social activism by serving as the central platform that connects like-minded people,
whatever their interests, and enables them to exchange information, share ideas, and collectively act to
address the issues they care about.
To augment the power of the grassroots networks that develop through Change.org, we help connect these networks
to the many nonprofit organizations that are already working to advance worthy causes around the world - over
1 million in total.
Ben demonstrates the features of Change.org and discusses how individuals and nonprofits are using it to build critical mass around issues. Comments[0] |
Sun, 22 April 2007 This podcast is an interview by David Collin, NetSquared's San Francisco podcaster with Ben Rattray, the founder of Change.org. According to their site:
Change.org aims to transform social activism by serving as the central platform that connects like-minded people,
whatever their interests, and enables them to exchange information, share ideas, and collectively act to
address the issues they care about.
To augment the power of the grassroots networks that develop through Change.org, we help connect these networks
to the many nonprofit organizations that are already working to advance worthy causes around the world - over
1 million in total. Ben explains why he established a site to enable people who are passionate issues to network and participate in ways not commonly available to them through established organizations. Ultimately, the goal is for the network and nonprofits to collaborate on common goals. Comments[0] |
Sun, 22 April 2007 This podcast is a Net Tuesday presentation by Gina Bianchini, the co-founder of Ning. Ning is
a platform for individuals and groups to use to create their own social
network. Ning has a rich feature set, and all features can be
configured and customized to meet the network's needs. Ning enables
users to have the experience of control of all aspects of their network
rather than being a tiny subset of a massive social network. Gina
describes how individuals and nonprofits are using Ning.Comments[0] |
Sun, 22 April 2007 This podcast is an interview by David Collin, the Net Tuesday podcaster in San Francisco, with Gina Bianchini, the co-founder of Ning. Ning is a platform for individuals and groups to use to create their own social network. Ning has a rich feature set, and all features can be configured and customized to meet the network's needs. Ning enables users to have the experience of control of all aspects of their network rather than being a tiny subset of a massive social network. Gina describes how individuals and nonprofits are using Ning.Comments[0] |
This podcast is a presentation by Ben Rattray, the founder of
This podcast is an interview by David Collin, NetSquared's San Francisco podcaster with Ben Rattray, the founder of Change.org. According to their site:
This podcast is a Net Tuesday presentation by Gina Bianchini, the co-founder of Ning. Ning is
a platform for individuals and groups to use to create their own social
network. Ning has a rich feature set, and all features can be
configured and customized to meet the network's needs. Ning enables
users to have the experience of control of all aspects of their network
rather than being a tiny subset of a massive social network. Gina
describes how individuals and nonprofits are using Ning.
This podcast is an interview by David Collin, the Net Tuesday podcaster in San Francisco, with Gina Bianchini, the co-founder of Ning. Ning is a platform for individuals and groups to use to create their own social network. Ning has a rich feature set, and all features can be configured and customized to meet the network's needs. Ning enables users to have the experience of control of all aspects of their network rather than being a tiny subset of a massive social network. Gina describes how individuals and nonprofits are using Ning.
