Vincent Cassar

Webaholic & Social Entrepreuneur 

Rwanda and technology

Here's an article on how even the poorer countries in Africa are using
technology to leverage their economies
 
http://www.techcrunch.com/2009/06/24/how-to-cross-the-digital-divide-rwanda-style/

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Excellent post about Kiva and the profit aspect of nonprofits

Here's an excellent post by Bethany Coates & Garth Saloner  from the Stanford Social Innovation School of Business on the profit aspect of nonprofits and Kiva as a case study. Good read!

Kiva, the first online peer-to-peer microcredit marketplace, is one of the fastest-growing nonprofits in history. But its nonprofit status was not inevitable. Here’s why Kiva chose to be a 501(c)(3), what this tax status buys the organization, and how being a nonprofit poses challenges.

Read more >> http://www.ssireview.org/articles/entry/the_profit_in_nonprofit/

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Cool ad by DeBeers

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NeoAid featured in Wired (and how Seacom will save Africa)

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Two very catchy headlines and yes they are true! I was approached a few weeks ago by James Watson, a writer for the famous Wired magazine who was writing a piece on Seacom - the new undersea submarine fibre-optic cable that will connect communication carriers in south and east Africa. He was kind enough to mention myself and subtly place the NeoAid url in the body of the article.

It’s either my 15 minutes of fame or the beginning of a success story, either way Africa will be saved by Seacom.  Hurray!

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is this for real?

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Cool idea: Tweet and GIVE

Social networking website users can now make money for charities by recommending products through URL-shortening service good.ly on Twitter, Facebook or via email.

Users put a link to a product or service within a Twitter message, known as a tweet, or a Facebook update through a shortened good.ly URL. Web retailers pay a referral fee for each person that purchases a product they have found after clicking on a good.ly link.

Good.ly will give charities 55% of the fee.

“We have the underlying technology anyway and it occurred to us that there is huge potential to monetise it for charities,” said Alicia Navarro, founder of good.ly. “We’re trying to piggy back on an exciting social media trend, earn a little money, and make it easier for people to support charities.”

At present three charities, The Dogs Trust, homelessness charity Crisis and US charity ChildVoice International, which works with children in Africa, are listed as potential beneficiaries of good.ly.

Good.ly aims to include more charities, and recommends that the service might be particularly useful to charities that have a large twitter following. Charities interested in using the service should contact good.ly via their website.


** This article was published form Philanthropyuk.org
Tweeters now give good.ly to charity
By Ben Eyre

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My new favorite website

http://www.springwise.com/

Springwise and its network of 8,000 spotters scan the globe for smart new business ideas, delivering instant inspiration to entrepreneurial minds.

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Doing good while doing well (Article)

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A look at where people around the world are directing their $$

An other great post from Good Magazine
http://awesome.goodmagazine.com/transparency/014/014-buying-whos-buying-what.html

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Stercus accidit

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