â a type of social and collaborative innovation in which innovators, users and communities collaborate using
-cal mass of users and exploit the network effect Digital social innovation plays a central role in the development of the Future Internet.
â a type of social and collaborative innovation in which innovators, users and communities collaborate using
the  user/co-producersâ and all the other participants to the initiative, taking into account the transforma
-tion of the role of the consumer into active users as co-creators and their deeper motivations to participate
network and its critical mass of users grows larger than its cost), emphasising the characteristics of Inter
and unable to gather a critical mass of users and exploit the network effect There are many cases of DSI being spread throughout society that we attempt to define
â¢The ways in which grassroots civic innovation might lead to systemic innovation â user-driven innova
-ties and users â¢How to transform individual and collective behaviours to shape a more sustainable society, by leveraging
it needs to bring citizens, users and society on board linking industry competitiveness with excellence in science and research and societal
appropriating users data, and discriminating network traffic. By centralising computing, data storage and service provision (via the Cloud),
closed, favouring incumbents and, in general, dominant players, thereby in time constraining user-driv -en innovations, particularly ones that donâ t involve monetary payment.
and for all users in an age of â combinato -rialâ innovation Collective intelligence may be defined as
â a type of social and collaborative innovation in which innovators, users and communities collaborate using dig
-gregation between users and/or their data â¢Demonstrates of a clear network effect â
â¢Driven by grassroots or âoebottom-upâ communities of users â¢Organisations and activities selected were scored then in this long-list against the technology trends
on the website for users to download and investigate, just as any custom code developed in the course of
Based on our understanding of the DSI community as the primary users of the system, we have designed
A digest email encourages users to complete any missing data in respect of this. Therefore, any organisation can exist on the map
data, network relationships, communication density and user generated data applied. Currently the web -site is focused on the geographic mapping of organisations.
-cal driven developments such as sensor networks and open data connected with a sustainable user-centric
delivering DSI services that enable users and developers to come together and collaborate in new ways.
driven by a community of users and the health data they create, and the organisation behind Github, the
and engage a large number of citizens and end users for a variety of causes: The majority of DSI services directly engage citizens
or the location of the user, is one example of open networks enabling citizens to protect their digital rights online.
informing users of all of the strengths and weaknesses of the network. Such tools are powerful in the hands
and users. The test-bed is a resource for the research community to address the limits and obstacles regard
microprocessor, which can be programmed with simple, open-source software tools by the user. The idea is
-ing, and that promotes Internet as a fundamental channel for allowing an increasingly active role of users
-working, users con -trol personal data Mobilising critical mass to achieve social & institu -tional change
increases as individual users or clusters of users engage with it. In Arduino, the open hardware approach
means that products developed by one part of the community are accessible for all other Arduino users
the best example of how the Internet enables users grow the value of a network with a social purpose
where users are involved in de -veloping or crowdsourcing content. As an example, users of the Your Priorities platform collaboratively
work on and prioritize proposals and thereby grow the value of these before they are represented to the
plethora of sources, in particular information generated by users (e g. through social networks) or captured from sensors (Internet of things.
A network between communities of users and DSI innovators is essential in order to both develop inno
the innovator shares the same social horizon with their community of potential users who benefit from
remaining in rapid feedback cycles with their users: sketching user interfaces, asking questions, coding small demonstrations, and the like.
As the feedback is elicited continually, the innovator makes sure their creation remains attuned to the world they are trying to change.
the user and the community, the engagement experience will be improved and the resources for the com
-grammed with simple, open-source software tools by the user. The idea is that anyone should be able to turn an Arduino into a simple electronic
Importantly, the social impact of creations developed by Arduino users themselves has been notably wide-reaching â an interesting example
and users are free to adapt them to their needs. While the hardware used to power Arduino
removed a lot of potential barriers to users previously excluded from get -ting involved in D. I. Y. hardware and robotics â the availability of Arduino
hardware design blueprints for download has meant users who ordinari -ly might not have been able to afford
Approximately 28 Million Users Worldwide. has taken 155,896, 453 actions since January â 07, in 194 countries
users to easily share online petitions or campaigns. According to Matt Hollandâ Avaazâ s Online Director, like other high-capacity web services
First, users enter basic information about the an -ticipated campaign (such as the campaignâ s goals, targets, as well as the
Following this, the user is pro -vided with a preview of the campaign and then given the option to make
users are encouraged to disseminate and share their campaign. All this means that within minutes, community members can start getting the
this coding, users are encouraged also to translate the siteâ s contents if they are able to do so
While users can use the website totally free of charge, the website features an integrated tool to make donations to the Your Priori
-tingent upon how many users they have What are the main barriers to innovate? Official political incorporation:
User interface: There needs to be as little friction as possible for taking part. Therefore, the team have made,
The user interface has been simplified in every generation of the software to enable more people to participate more easily
team are considering is that users could be offered cash prizes for partic -ipating: â You might,
report that Shadow Parliament never gained the critical mass of users re -quired for it to work effectively,
a wider international community of users How to achieve better European collaboration? The Citizens Foundation was awarded for their efforts with Better Rey
and attracts users from both sides. It bridges the very real gap to enable them to work together,
Standards and implementations have become so user friendly that the potential user base is large. The Open Data policies implemented by the
EU and individual countries facilitate the building of Citysdk as well as its rapid spreading and uptake
smart services where user generated data make up the core activity of the service How is funded the organisation?
-able users â to provide real time validation for innovative methodologies and new applications arising from cutting edge technology in wireless
engage and explore with users in â real-life environmentsâ, using primarily 81 three new technologies:
it has now over 30.000 users Website: http://confine-project. eu Organisation Name Confine Short description The Confine Testbed experimental facility supports experimentally-driv
brings in additional users (researchers) with a common entry point and additional resources (nodes, servers, links) in sparsely populated areas
Users should be able to cooperate in the network, while maintaining the privacy of their
new notion of trust between users What helps to reach goals and overcome barriers? Community networks are an emerging field to provide citizens with con
the networks are the users themselves. Research on this field is neces -sary to support Community Networks growth and scope, and improve
and information presentation to users by means of mobile and web-based devices such as smartphones, computers and
At the same time, web-interfaces allow users to easily upload their sensor readings, and equally easily tag these with subjective
Users can run experiments, partake in experiments, share their experiences, and carry out research. Experiments range from urban
Or through gaming, users can con -tribute to scientific research. Since the games on the platform have been
same time, Widenoise also visualises the data to explain to users in a more accessible manner how they might gain a deeper understanding of
This enables users to see the measurements in real time by using a Bluetooth and Airprobe app on
and also makes it possible for users to access the aggregate data gathered by the community, as personalised information
Users in the 4 cities compete to build the most complete map (in terms of time and space) of
-adigm to provide users with the opportunity of collectively categorising evaluating and filtering the content they browse
Generating data and sharing opinion in a user friendly manner: The combination of sensor-based data generation and online sharing pro
-vides the possibility of gathering opinions in a user friendly manner Sensor-based gathering of temperature and noise-level information, for
and personalised representation of the collected data to users has the potential of triggering a bottom-up improvement of citizensâ behaviours
History and mission One of the cornerstones of Fablabs is that users must learn to do it
Users learn by designing and creating objects of personal interest or impor -tance. Empowered by the experience of making something themselves
developed in line with open innovation principles, enabling end users designers, researchers and manufacturers to jointly develop the prosthe
The platform has 4 million users worldwide Website: https://github. com /Organisation Name Github Short description Github, a San francisco-based company, was started in 2008 as a way
This allows the copying of a repository from one user account to another possible because the code is open source.
-eral Github users (carried out by the School of Computer science and the Center for the Future of Work, Heinz College and Carnegie mellon
Users combine these inferences into effective strategies for coordinating work, advancing technical skills and manag
Github expand its user base to over 3 million users (now over 4 million As of July 9th the company was valued at $750 million
and to follow other users and projects of interest 118 Furthermore, by making use of the latest HTML5 API, activities like nav
allowing any user toâ forkâ any public project. By clicking the âoeforkâ button any Github user can almost instantaneously create their own version of
an existing project. That âoeforkedâ project can be used as the basis for a new project,
when you require users to fill out forms or register for barely usable software before they too can get involved, etc
intended to enable users to navigate through its site, and to choose the most suitable healthcare package.
Git, an eight-year-old source-code management tool that most users still manage via a command-line interface.
of users. The marginal cost of each new project is likely less than $1 per year 121
14.000 registered users, launched 100 successful projects and sourced more than 700 nonfinancial contributions Website: http://goteo. org
the platform had more than 14, 000â registered users, with more than 9, 000 daily visits, and significant social media attention as well (the plat
where users can enter their post code to explore their own locality to see whatâ s available
-ing users in their efforts to secure land through local councils. Land -shareâ s Letâ s Grow Campaign aims to assist in the matching up of grow
that enables users to photograph areas of unused land and plot them on a map.
and chat functions where users can ask â vegetable doctorsâ for advice on particular questions,
Considering the project boasts over 70,000 registered users-as of November 2013, Landshareâ s use of open networking and crowdsourc
DSI network effect Users can set up groups via the app, inviting friends or people living in
-pendent from the users of the software. The Liquid Feedback software is published under an open MIT license
and additions to the community whenever possible so that the next user can add other enhancements. When a user adds a function to hardware
it affects the software, which adds a reason to enhance and improve the overall performance of the software to take advantage of the new
Boundary information (stored in Mapit) allows users to search any loca -tion covered by the Pombola instance
Integrated tools allow users to comment on and socially share individual pages Twitter streams on the home page and a blog for news items
Over 250,000 problems reported, with 50%of users having never reported a problem to their local authority before
Over 1. 5m unique users a year. From surveys we know that three out of five users had looked never up information on
what their MP was doing in Parliament before using Theyworkforyou and about 90%of users said that Theyworkforyou had improved their
knowledge of their political representatives Whatdotheyknow: Over 130,000 Freedom of Information requests issued so far
(which has over 1. 5m unique users a year) three out of five of their users had looked never up information on
what their MP was doing in Parliament before using Theyworkforyou and about 90%of users said that Theyworkforyou had increased their
knowledge of their political representatives. It is questionable how an organisation like mysociety could have had such obvious results in the
users ask for. Thinking about the minimum possible number of features your new project could have launched
mysociety has a strong culture of user-centered design, and a culture that regularly questions whether features or projects will actually have
needs of local users as best as is possible, and to use the UK as a lab to
-tal systems that embed user-centred values, plus the values of openness and transparency To develop better impact metrics to gain a better understanding of how
or donâ t impact positively on users 143 Open Government Wien At a glance Type of Organisation:
âoefruit Flyâ an app that offers users a visual map that captures data on all fruit trees on public ground in Vienna.
and the community of over 500 users is made up by a diverse demographic of students, teachers and professors
are public âoelife platformsâ where users can chat or meet the experts of the City of Vienna,
to use their ID verification for users. This meant that certain users were 151 able to use the site for free to sign particular initiatives, whilst others
from a different bank were not. It was thus not possible to continue this feature.
Instead users can now use the website to sandbox ideas, find support amongst the community of users,
and collaborate in partner -ship with voluntary legal and campaign experts. The Open Ministry also
encourages users to sign and support existing initiatives on the official Ministry of Justice website,
3 million users in 2013, which is tripled from 1 million a year before registered Website:
The simple mobile app enables users to connect to each other seamlessly and share their Internet connection
Open Garden aims to change the way mobile users are using and sharing the Internet.
ubiquitous mobile Internet, mobile consumers have become data users and data transfer activities are constantly taking place among mobile
users. Skyrocketing consumption of mobile data is becoming curbed by a finite amount of licensed spectrum and the capacity limitations of
Capacity and spectrum limitations can impact the user experience in very important â and very negative â ways.
By crowdsourcing connectivity, Open Garden enables users to connect to the mobile web more frequently and with better results
It enables users to access the most appro -priate connection without configuring their devices or jumping through
It also enables users to access the Internet as cheaply as possible Faster Downloads: Users can find the fastest connection and most
powerful signal without checking every available network, and can move between networks seamlessly. Open Garden provides a way to access
-tive, to create a new way of Internet sharing through users installing a mobile app,
number of users, shared access/karma metrics, and user stories on how it positively impacted their community
What it the role of the organisation within the DSI ecosystem? Its mobile app directly and practically creates an open network, where
all users could share their Internet to make it much more accessible. To -gether with these benefits it is creating an ecosystem among consumers
users to manually sift through available networks to find the best one available. It minimizes network traffic without the use of data caps and
active users, is forming into a community, where everyone is granted the access to knowledge and tools for communication.
When building trust with a community of users to use the app, Open Garden benefited a lot from
people becoming community users, such as mobile data costumers, mak -ers, hackers, the DIY community, urbanites and crowds, events attendees
In addition large numbers of users are students, teachers and professors 161 Open Knowledge Foundation At a glance
-ers, enabling users to browse and find the data they need, and preview it using maps,
Some of the most prominent users of CKAN include the UKÂ sâ data. gov. uk website, the United states governmentâ sâ Data. gov and
which Ouishare believes could fasten the adoption of new user practic -es, encourage policy-makers to support sustainable models, and drive
mass of users What helps to reach goals and overcome barriers? No information available 168
unique users in 2012 In addition to this the foundations work on Choke Point was recognised with a â The next Ideaâ award (previous recipients include Wikileaks) by
Users and sup -porters are encouraged to help support what the P2p Foundation do on a continued basis by donating in a similar way to that adopted by
Wikipedia â with users being given the option to donate preset or other amounts through a Paypal platform
-ber of registered users had grown to more than 45,000. In April 2011 the company expanded its scope
The more data generated from users the more detailed insights the network can garner from the data and in
Users can share or request items from people in their neighbourhood online, via the Peerby website, their mobile or
active communities of users outside in Netherlands History and Mission The basic idea of Peerby is that having access to a product is more impor
which enables users to borrow and share anything from trumpets to laptop chargers with their
Evolution of consuming behaviours from owners to users In the P2p model, which is also being used by Peerby, individuals trans
if user lent something out but do not get it back, they will work hard and try everything in their
and giving users (and small business -esâ) a chance to find their own destiny. â Eben Upton
When switched on, users are greeted first by a command line code which in recent years has tended to remain in the background of closed
software programmes), meaning that from the point of startup users are encouraged to begin tinkering
a userâ s skill level will naturally vary from person to person thereâ s a user
build an ecosystem of more engaged creator-users, and seeks to redress shortfall of computer programmers
Linux that presents users with a basic text login rather than a slick GUI 188
by default, with the entire operating system and user files stored on a swappable SD card
Current Raspberry Pi users can also avail of this joint recent collabora -tion. Community members that have at least 600 MB of free space on
With Coder, users can develop their own apps for the web and then host them on a miniature server
users can host their own websites via Raspberry Pi or zip them to share with friends
which amongst others enabled users to mount the counter on the outside of a car and use GPS technology to timestamp
Volunteer Geiger counter users and social media users among others are necessary to produce specific type of nuclear risk knowledge
More than 400 active users and more backers Website: http://smartcitizen. me /Organisation Name Fablab Barcelona
of users, who will capture, collate and share their data online on smart -citizen. me/pages/sck online platform.
barriers for users to purchase functional sensors Easy capture and distribution of data The generation of analysis and further research as a result of this open
motivate users to send data Smart Citizen kit has its own community, where users collect and share
the data online. But to keep users being motivated and therefore to keep the community active, is essential to
what Smart Citizen Kit wants to achieve. In response to this challenge, the team is frequently designing
-gage the users To make the data and the technology meaningful: The team consider their Smart Citizen Kit as very effective data producers.
has grown from 500,000 daily users worldwide to more than 4 million users Website: https://www. torproject. org
Organisation Name The Tor Project Short description The Tor project is a nonprofit organisation that conducts research and
corporations â learning web users location or tracking their browsing habits. It offers a technology that bounces Internet usersâ and websitesâ
information or the location of the user. The software â the Tor browser bundle â can be downloaded
you, the user, not to have all these companies take it by default. And let
The Tor project team explain how its users fall into a few main groups normal people who want to keep their Internet activities private from
and users evading censorship in certain parts of the world. Tor notes that its tech
user â as well as activists and journalists in countries with strict censor -ship of media and the Internet.
as key users, with the latter including police needing to mask their IP addresses when working undercover online, or investigating âoequestion
For more mainstream users, it could mean running Tor so that your childrenâ s location canâ t be identified when they
After the NSA surveillance revelations in 2013, a new wave of users joined the service. Â Between 19 august and 27 august alone the number
relays carry 16 Gbps for upwards of half a million daily users Building on this, the team behind Tor describes themselves as undertak
laws to silence other online users. Ongoing trends in law, policy, and technology threaten anonymity as never before,
gone from around  500,000 daily users worldwide to more than 4 million users in 2013 and more than 3000 volunteers support the rerouting
traffic which is fundamental to service What it the role of the organisation within the DSI ecosystem?
harm user trust in the digital ecosystem, stifle innovation, and lead to a harmful balkanization of the Internet.
where only those users who seek out complex, bolt-on security tools get protected communications, or worse yet become reluctant to use digital
what can be done to regain user trust 204 What technological methods and tools is it using, and
the anonymity of users trying to find help for suicide prevention, domes -tic violence, and abuse-recovery. â
-ap enable users to operate outside of traditional communication barriers to potentially monitor elections, map crisis information or curate local
users in Kenya, and was the central to the Ushahidi team realising there was need a for a platform based on it,
the use of Openstreetmap maps in its user interface, but requires the Google maps API for geocoding.
public users) with research institutions (academic and otherwise e g CRUK) that allows the massive volumes of data to be processed through
With the launch of Zoo Tools users have been given yet another platform to collaborate with the data generated even further.
granting connection access to all network users, particularly for renewable power sources and high efficiency local generation with zero or low carbon emissions
and user For a successful transition to a future sustainable energy system all the relevant stakeholders must become
â¢User-centric approach: increased interest in electricity market opportunities value added services, flexible demand for energy, lower prices, microgeneration
benefits to all users, stakeholders and companies that perform efficiently and effectively â¢enables Europeâ s electricity
create a strongly user-centric approach for all customers 8 E u R O P E A n T E C H N O L O G Y P L a T F
government members to everyday users, every stakeholder will help to shape the Smartgrids system. What are the different needs
Users: Usersâ needs include quality of service and value for money. In the coming years, usersâ expectations will broaden
satisfy the growing needs of users. Some users will seek simple âoeturnkeyâ products. Cost efficiencies and savings
will need to be made visible, in monetary terms This must be accompanied by an increase in services delivered and a reduction of
ancillary services and their users. They must also share a vision of electrical system performance. A pan European approach is essential since,
users, particularly for RES and high efficiency local generation with zero or low carbon emissions
energy delivery to end-users 16 E u R O P E A n T E C H N O L O G Y P L a T F
User specified quality security and reliability of supply for the digital age Flexible, optimal and strategic grid
Today, most users are passive receivers of electricity without further participation in the operational management of the generation
Each user node is simply a â sinkâ for electricity However, in the last decade many countries have started the process of
communications capability and greatly improved user information, is now a reality and deployment is already taking place in some European countries
avoidance of usage or local generation enables each user node in the future network to behave as both sink and source.
developments including end user communications access 5. Setting up Smart Power grids Electricity grids of the future are Smart in several ways.
two-way flows will exist between provider and user. This type of exchange has characterised the popularity of the internet-how is Smartgrids preparing
users through smart metering systems â¢distribution grids that facilitate dynamic control techniques and high levels of
well as the development of a flexible, multi-user connected network which establishes power and communication transfer possibilities among all players
the users of the network will expect a responsive system. They will experience connection according to simple and defined standards
deployment, real user experience will be disseminated to the wider market place to generate awareness of and confidence
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