Frage an den Club:
Weiß jemand etwas Genaueres über "change.org" ?
Wer steckt dahinter, wer ist die graue Eminenz?
helmut-1 , Siebenbürgen, Montag, 30.11.2015, 17:54 vor 3719 Tagen 3821 Views
Weiß jemand etwas Genaueres über "change.org" ?
Wer steckt dahinter, wer ist die graue Eminenz?
pigbonds , Montag, 30.11.2015, 18:49 vor 3719 Tagen @ helmut-1 3204 Views
Weiß jemand etwas Genaueres über "change.org" ?
Wer steckt dahinter, wer ist die graue Eminenz?
schaumermal, wohnhaft, Montag, 30.11.2015, 19:09 vor 3719 Tagen @ pigbonds 2603 Views
Übrigens mit gleich hohem Investment bei HackerOne und Change.org vertreten.
https://www.crunchbase.com/person/nicolas-berggruen/investments
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schaumermal
pigbonds , Montag, 30.11.2015, 19:13 vor 3719 Tagen @ schaumermal 2681 Views
Übrigens mit gleich hohem Investment bei HackerOne und Change.org
vertreten.
Zahlen gut:
https://angel.co/change-org
Orodara , Mittwoch, 02.12.2015, 13:16 vor 3717 Tagen @ pigbonds 1379 Views
Übrigens mit gleich hohem Investment bei HackerOne und Change.org
vertreten.
Zahlen gut:
https://angel.co/change-org
CalBaer , Montag, 30.11.2015, 19:28 vor 3719 Tagen @ helmut-1 2730 Views
...What many people fail to realize is that Change.org isn’t a non-profit organization. Though anyone can set up a petition for free, the company makes an awful lot of money from all the data it collects about its online petitions and the people who sign them. It’s not just a path to The People. It’s a Google-like Big Data play....
Meet Change.org, the Google of Modern Politics
http://www.wired.com/2013/09/change-org/
Also ich waere da vorsichtig, meinen Klarnamen zu hinterlassen.
"Mit seiner Anti-Monsanto-Haltung ist der Bewerber fuer die Stelle leider ungeeignet" (aus einem rein fiktiven Dialog einer Personalabteilung)
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Ein ueberragender Teil der Oekonomen, Politiker, Banker, Analysten und Journalisten ist einfach unfaehig, Bitcoin richtig zu verstehen, weil es so revolutionaer ist.
Info:
www.tinyurl.com/y97d87xk
www.tinyurl.com/yykr2zv2
helmut-1 , Siebenbürgen, Dienstag, 01.12.2015, 12:24 vor 3718 Tagen @ helmut-1 2214 Views
bearbeitet von unbekannt, Dienstag, 01.12.2015, 12:28
Als ich unter dem Suchbegriff nachgeblättert hab, stelle ich fest, dass die selbe Frage nach der change.org. schon mal jemand gestellt hat, nämlich Fokus am 25.9.2015
So nebenbei ist mir dann auch aufgefallen, dass dieser Fokus, der sonst regelmäßig kommentiert hat, seit geraumer Zeit , nämlich seit dem 17.10., gar nichts mehr von sich hören läßt.
Weiß jemand was über den Zeitgenossen? Ist der ausgewandert, hat sich zurückgezogen, ist gestorben oder wurde aus dem Forum geworfen?
Muss mal sehen, ob man den über das Forum direkt anschreiben kann, - hab gehört, dass sowas geht.
helmut-1 , Siebenbürgen, Dienstag, 01.12.2015, 15:07 vor 3718 Tagen @ helmut-1 2687 Views
Direkt auf mein Mail kam die Auflösung des Rätsels. Es handelt sich um einen Teil des Soros-Netzwerkes
Nachzulesen unter:
http://www.theartofannihilation.com/portfolio/avaaz-imperialist-pimps-of-militarism-pro...
Dabei findet man weiter unten unter der Überschrift ""The Commerce of Exploitation: Change.org" eine klare Darstellung. Sie lautet:
“And nobody’s making more money from online petitions than Change.org. I wonder how many people visiting a change.org petition know that despite its dot-org name, the organization is a for-profit lead generation business. Just take a look at their partners page, and you’ll see what they do…. Change.org is being deliberately deceitful through the use of the change.org name. I’d suspect that the average change.org user does not know that Change.org is a for-profit corporation, and that the corporation plans on using the contact information being provided to them to earn revenue.†— Clay Johnson, Information Diet
Change.org (based in San Francisco, CA), founded in 2005, was launched on 7 February 2007 by current CEO Ben Rattray (with a background in economics), with the support of current CTO Mark Dimas and Adam Cheyer (co-founder of Siri software and director of engineering in the iPhone group at Apple). As of February 2012, the site has 100 employees with offices on 4 continents. By the end of 2012, Rattray “plans to have offices in 20 countries and to operate in several more languages, including Arabic and Chinese.†It was reported on 5 April 2012 that Change.org hit 10 million members, and is currently the fastest-growing social action platform on the web. They are currently receiving 500 new petitions per day. [Source: Wikipedia]
The founding Change.org team of advisors include Darren Haas, developer of financial trading and currency exchange software with Euronet Worldwide; Sundeep Ahuja, founder/product manager/marketing/strategy advisor/investor/co-founder/president at blissmo, Kiva.org, indiegogo, DailyFeats, Sparked.com, richrelevance, friendput, MySpace, and an actor, to boot; and Joe Greenstein, software developer and co-founder and CEO of Flixster.
Change.org is a member of George Soros’s Media Consortium. Change.org is subtle yet clear in their affiliations. Ample media coverage provided by Media Consortium partners and social media/tech sites, etc. Change.org seldom fails to mention the other effective organizations – Avaaz.org, Sumofus.org, and 38degrees.org.uk.
On the Change.org partner page, the corporation states they have hundreds of partners, yet only 5 are made public. Yet they make no secret of their expanding empire:
“We’re Hiring!: Change.org is a rapidly expanding and profitable social venture, growing by more than a million new members a month by empowering people across the globe to win social action campaigns on a wide range of issues such as human rights, global poverty, and environmental protection. Our current partners include hundreds of the world’s largest nonprofits, including Amnesty International, Sierra Club, Human Rights Campaign, and the United Nations Foundation.â€
Change.org is the darling of corporate media powerhouse TIME magazine, which having named change.org founder Ben Rattray, as one of TIME’s, 100 Most Influential People of 2012 while profiling of Olmo Gálvez in TIME Magazine’s 2011 Person of the Year – The Protestor. Goodman (of Democracy Now!) describes Gálvez as “a young entrepreneur with experience in several countries….†Such corporate-controlled entities lend credibility and legitimacy to “leaders,†movements and ideologies that secure and protect corporate power. Such well-greased mechanisms are essential in establishing a collective consent to the hegemony of the ruling oligarchy. Other recent instances of corporate-sponsored NGO “leaders†that have been praised by the likes of TIME and foundation-funded “progressive†media include “green†capitalist Al Gore, who is also deemed by TIME as one of the 100 Most Influential, while Rockefeller’s lovechild Bill McKibben seems to have taken up!
symbolic residence at the studio of Democracy Now! In a patriarchal society, charismatic fellows such as Gore and McKibben are key members of a manufactured, managerial elite, building global public acceptance for the illusory green economy – formerly known as industrialized capitalism – the goal being to protect capitalism, thereby protecting the current structures at all costs, by any means necessary, by every means available.
Francisco Polo is now director of Change.org Spain, after founding Actuable, a Spanish-based campaign platform that merged with Change.org in 2011. Prior to this, Polo was coordinator of Amnesty International in Barcelona. On 7 October 2011, techPresident reports the following in an article titled Change.org’s International Move:
“This was a crucial night for the protestors calling themselves ‘indignados,’ who had descended upon Puerta del Sol on May 15 intent on staying until national elections in Spain. Frustrated with a political system they feel does not work for them, many of them out of work, they stayed to protest in defiance of a national law that prohibits discussion of electoral politics so close to the elections. But it was also a crucial night forActuable, an online petitions platform then just a few months old. Protesters wanted to tell Spanish elections authority, the Junta Electoral Central, that they had a right to be heard. While they rallied in Madrid despite the electoral rules, they also went online – to Actuable, where a petition asserting their right to demonstrate, even immediately before an election, collected 200,000 signatures….
“Actuable co-founder Francisco Polo told techPresident in a recent interview. ‘It was an unprecedented way to empower people.’ It’s hard to know what impact the petition actually had, but the chance to see use by the indignados was a moment in the sun for Actuable. Founded last year, Actuable was always intended to operate in the style of Change.org – which recently acquired the Madrid-based platform. Now it is a new international presence for Change.org, and part of the company’s new plans to expand globally….
“Polo is now director of Change.org Spain, and Actuable will be rebranded with Change.org’s colors over the next few months….
“A company spokesman says that the two platforms will be completely merged by 2012, with languages and campaigns localized for each visitor. Actuable’s 720,000-some-odd members will be rolled into Change.org’s user base, which already grows – or so the company claims – by about 400,000 users a month.
“Actuable rolling into Change.org comes as ‘indignados’ emerge in Mexico City, and one of our own commenters points us to student protesters advocating for education reform in Chile.†"