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Martial Arts Instructor Joins PTP as Technology Knowledge Director

PTP is excited to announce the addition of Alice Aguilar to PTP's staff team.  Alice joins PTP as our Technology Knowledge Director, where she'll be responsible for coordinating technical support for participants in our VOTER Project.  As part of her work, she will also be leading the Power on Network - PTP's community of practice on technology and organizing.Alice Aguilar and a barcode scanner

For over 10 years, Alice has been committed to providing capacity-building support to advocacy and community organizing groups that focused on issues such as environmental justice, indigenous subsistence and sovereignty rights, at-risk youths, immigrant rights, and low-income communities access to health care.

Her earlier days as a database specialist and trainer started with her work with the Rockefeller Technology Project and the introduction of ebaseTM version 1.0. Her work and interests then quickly transitioned to focusing on providing communication technology assistance and training with environmental justice groups in the Southwest through the Environmental Support Center.

Alice is currently living in Anchorage, AK, and will be moving back to Brooklyn, NY later this summer.  Check out the PTP blog for updates on Alice's whereabouts and the occasional blog from the road.  Read more about Alice on our website.  PS - Alice really is a former martial arts instructor.  Though her bio doesn't list it, she used to teach Filipino Arnis.

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A New Generation Reinvents Philanthropy - WSJ Article

Its a new day in philanthropy! Here's a great example of the online social networking phenomena having a relationship to philanthropy - especially the younger generation of philanthopists. It also takes an interesting look at bringing visibility to social causes using these online tools that are used by many of us young folk. Peace

A New Generation
Reinvents Philanthropy
Blogs, Social-Networking Sites
Give 20-Somethings a Means
To Push, Fund Favorite Causes
By RACHEL EMMA SILVERMAN

August 21, 2007; Page D1
Joe Alamo didn't set out to become a do-gooder. But late last year, when the Geneva, N.Y., Web designer was surfing on MySpace, he chanced onto the profile of Kiva.org1, a nonprofit that allows people to make zero-interest "microfinance" loans over the Internet to needy entrepreneurs in developing countries.
Soon after, Mr. Alamo not only became a lender through Kiva, but he also started a new Web site, Kivafriends.org2, devoted to Kiva enthusiasts. He also now volunteers to run Kiva's MySpace page. "This is the first time I've ever gotten so involved with a charity," says Mr. Alamo, now 30 years old.
YOUNG MONEY

• Plus: The 27-year-old founder of Change.org6 explains how he got started and how he earns a living. Read the interview7.
Young donors and volunteers, snubbing traditional appeals such as direct mail and phone calls, are satisfying their philanthropic urges on the Internet. They're increasingly turning to blogs and social-networking Web sites, such as MySpace and Facebook, to spread the word about -- and raise funds for -- their favorite nonprofits and causes. They're sending Web-based fund-raising pitches to their friends and families, encouraging them, in turn, to forward the appeals to their own contacts.
At the same time, a growing number of charities -- ranging from start-ups to established names such as the Salvation Army -- are launching profiles on popular social-networking sites, hoping that young people will link up to the pages. Some are also encouraging bloggers to mention the causes on their sites, raising thousands of dollars in small donations from readers.
Many of the nonprofits that have embraced social networking are themselves run by people in their 20s and 30s, who already spend a good portion of their lives online. Some of them also appeal to donors by offering them tangible results of their gifts by directly linking contributors with recipients.
Social-networking sites, for their part, are offering new tools to help attract nonprofits and contributors. In May, a social-action start-up called Project Agape launched a new program on Facebook called "Causes," in which users can create online communities to advocate for various issues, charities and political candidates. Since then, the program has attracted more than 2.5 million Facebook users, raising some $300,000 for nonprofits and politicians, says Joe Green, 24, the project's co-founder.
That move comes after MySpace -- which already hosts thousands of nonprofits' profiles -- launched its "Impact" awards late last year, honoring individuals and nonprofit groups that have successfully used the site to make a difference. MySpace members vote on the winners, who get $10,000.
Visitors to another social-networking site, Change.org8, which also launched in May, can join "virtual foundations" of peers dedicated to specific causes, such as fighting AIDS in Africa, and raise money for the charities or political candidates that support those issues. So far, its 30,000 members have raised nearly $50,000, says founder Ben Rattray, 27. Before launching the site, Mr. Rattray had never made a charitable donation, finding charities' traditional pitches to be "unengaging."
Some young philanthropists are turning to "viral fund raising" -- sending appeals to their network of contacts that are forwarded on to others -- to maximize the power of small donations. Users of SixDegrees.org9, a program launched by nonprofit site Network for Good, can create a "charity badge" listing their favorite cause and send it out to their acquaintances. The badge keeps a running tally of how much has been raised and how many donors have contributed. Since the program was launched in January, users have created some 6,000 charity badges, raising some $740,000.
"When you're young and starting out, it's very difficult to take this meager paycheck you have and donate part of it to something else," says Samantha Millman, 26, of Los Angeles, who works for a real-estate investment firm.
Several months ago, Ms. Millman created a badge on behalf of Bet Tzedek -- the House of Justice, a legal-aid program in Los Angeles. "I basically blasted everyone I knew," says Ms. Millman, raising more than $15,000 from 406 donors. "I was not only surprised by the dollar amount, but to have 400 people somehow hearing about this through word of mouth was phenomenal," she says, adding that many of the donations were for just $10.
Bloggers are also pounding the drums for their favorite causes. Sarah D. Bunting, 34, who writes Tomato Nation, a culture and humor blog, offered to shave her head if her readers donated $30,000 to DonorsChoose.org10, a charity that allows contributors to directly purchase school supplies for needy classrooms. The funds were raised within days. (For a video of Ms. Bunting's head being shorn last year, go to www.tinyurl.com/32svqs11.) DonorsChoose.org now features a "Blogger Challenge" on its site where bloggers compete to raise money among their readers.
Established charities, to be sure, have long had programs targeted to young donors, and many of them, especially health-related causes, have used peer-to-peer fund raising to help raise money, often in connection with races and other sporting events. But many of these charities either tend to target wealthier donors or are focused on occasional events, rather than on ongoing operations.
Some of the newer Web-based nonprofits, such as DonorsChoose and Kiva, are attractive because contributors say they allow them to connect directly with their recipients. Donors or lenders can hand over money directly to, respectively, teachers and students in urban public schools or individual entrepreneurs in developing countries, rather than sending a check that ends up with an abstract recipient.
"You can donate money to a charity, but it seems like it just goes into a pile and you never know what really goes on there," says Mr. Alamo, the Kiva lender. "With Kiva, you just pick someone out and lend to them directly and watch what they do and how they succeed. That was the main appeal."
Kiva, which started in the fall of 2005, has already drawn more than 89,600 lenders who have lent $10 million. Mr. Alamo's Kivafriends.org Web site has attracted about 600 members since it was launched in March.
Some older charities are grappling with how to best take advantage of social-networking sites. The Salvation Army, for instance, has had a MySpace profile for "Red Kettle," its online persona, since last year. But the site has only roughly 80 online "friends," or people who have linked to it. (By contrast, Kiva has some 7,000 online friends on MySpace.)
Melissa Temme, 28 years old, a Salvation Army spokeswoman who came up with the MySpace page, says that in order to be successful on social-networking sites, charities need to spend a lot of time updating content and communicating with members, which can be difficult for a stretched nonprofit staff. "There has to be a certain level of interaction with other people and their pages," she says.
In order to keep its online postings up-to-date, DoSomething.org12, which seeks to get young people involved in social action, enlisted an Ohio University college student. "We're trying to use social networking as much as possible," says Aria Finger, 24, DoSomething's business development director. "We want to reach young people where they already are." The charity boasts roughly 5,500 MySpace friends and more than 2,200 on Facebook.

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Myspace versus email?

Social Networking Mania or Guilty Pleasures?

Are you on myspace? Friendster? Facebook? Linked-In? Hi-5? Or have you been fortunate to escape the clutches of the “in-thing(s)” these days. I couldn’t tell you which of these are pure social networking tools and which are guilty pleasures masquerading as social networking tools. But I do know some of these can look a lot like an online dating service gone bad rather than a network to connect you to people within your vocational or social realm.

Okay, I confess, I have a myspace account. And like everybody else on it, I too can claim I have a legit reason to indulge myself regardless of all the spam and other madness that goes on there. Because really, its madness.

I don’t have a thorough nor thesis-worthy understanding of social networking as a phenomena, but I might hardly need that to know that a lot of these online facilitators are just plain bizaare in terms of functionality. For instance, for a little while there I was bombarded with emails about “are you on facebook?” When I finally joined all I earned for my leap of faith were emails that said “so I sent you a message on facebook, did u get it?” I like email somewhat so this is tragic. Really it is.

Hence, I dedicate this blog entry to all inquiring minds, especially those that are (or not?) in this matrix but wish they had taken the red pill so they would at least know what the fuss is all about. From a limited and “reluctant insiders” perspective, I will divulge secrets of the matrix (in this case myspace) Is it worth it? Does it work? What’s it good for? Is it the best out there? And of course how many agent smiths (aka spam) are there?

“Is it worth it?” Well, I’m on myspace as an artist so I bear the cross, suffer the hacking, spamming, and endless advertisements sprawling all over the site. I also run a myspace site for PTP’s Techcamp to connect with organizers and organizing groups that are on it as well. Unfortunately 10 out of every dozen friend requests I get for Tech Camp are from “lonely” and “friendly” cyber-created Eves looking for Adams, with little interest in learning basic computer skills useful for organizing. It could be funny or annoying. The latter is more true. But then again I see a reasonably successful US Social Forum mobilization campaign on myspace and that seems to attract the “right” audience.

Is it the best out there? Technically that should be an emphatic no considering all its telemarketer-ish tendencies; i.e. loads of unsolicited and unwanted info. But as is the case with many other technologies, the most popular ones aren’t necessarily the most useful or manageable info. There are over a100 million (and counting) members on myspace. Whew. That’s hard to compete with. The reach and possibilities of these figures are really enticing and might be a reason a lot of artists gravitate to the myspace medium.

There is much more to be said, but I have to pull out a “to-be-continued” right here and ponder how myspace and facebook ate my emails and churned them into emails about messages online.

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