Best Free Volunteer, Charity, and Donation Technology [1]
Introduction
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There are many free ways to volunteer, give to charity, and use the Internet to help other people.
One of my favorite places to investigate charities is at the Charity Navigator. You can find charitable organizations to help you donate cars, support the troops, find charity events, or feed the hungry. One of my favorite free programs for volunteer helping is BOINC. It helps turn PCs into engines for scientific projects that seek to advance our knowledge, cure disease, or find other intelligent beings across the universe! And they can't do their work without volunteers. You can also help charity for free! An interesting option is free Internet games like FreeRice. You can use The Hunger Site and similar sites to fight starvation and support many other causes, and all you have to do is click everyday or leave a website/application open. They give to selected charities based on the amount of fees they get from advertisers or organizations. A flexible option is the GoodSearch toolbar or its search box that aptly replaces your current search engine (Google, Yahoo!, etc.). You pick your favorite charity or organization, use the search engine like normal, and watch GoodSearch divert some of its fees from advertisers to your charity. All for doing what you would normally do anyways. V. Volunteer Sites on the Internet But other places provide massive databases for volunteer opportunities, volunteer ideas, and virtual volunteering or charity opportunities: Idealist.org, VolunteerMatch, USA Freedom Corps, and Network for Good. VI. Volunteer in Collaborative Knowledge or Wiki Sites The Internet allows for us to share information in elaborate and easy ways. You can volunteer your time, energy, or expertise and have fun in the process! Many scholars discourage using sources such as Wikipedia because some of its articles might be written by some kid in his basement. But then if you follow around those same scholars, you have a very high chance of seeing them use Wikipedia over and over and over again! Notes I checked all websites with WOT (www.mywot.com [4]). Some people left comments on WOT wondering how you can be certain that free online charity sites actually make the donations they say they do; I'm not entirely sure how to discover this, but it's a good guess that the information is available to the public since the websites name the charities to which they donate. FreeRice, for example, is actually mentioned right on the website of its charity of choice. And popular charities named on GoodSearch would be fairly angry if they never received a check. If in doubt, contact the named charities and ask. Feel free to help me by adding to this list. Consider writing a comment below about your favorite places online for free charity, volunteer helping, volunteer opportunities, charity events, etc. |
The Volunteer and Charity List: Find the Best Websites, Webware, or Freeware to Help Other People Online
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I. Most Interesting Charity/Volunteer Services on the Internet
Charity Navigator has a "Donate" link on its site that automatically adds charity donations over in a cart at Network for Good, but I like to use it mainly to learn more about charities. It is especially helpful for evaluating free click websites to see if they make donations to effective charity partners. But for many this is not a primary concern since even if a charity is spending a large percent of its finances on advertising or administrative costs, you may still want to support it for the importance of the cause (and sometimes to make their cause successful they may need to spend). But one of the best features on Charity Navigator is the ability to compare similar types of charities to see if there is a major difference. This gives you a tremendous tool to make intelligent gifts to charity. Related Sites
SETI@home [10], for example, is endorsed and supported by the SETI Institute [11] (3/4 stars from Charity Navigator), so some of these BOINC projects are serious scientific pursuits (well, as serious as SETI can get!). There are many different versions [12] to download, supporting Windows 98-Vista, Mac, Linux, and XP-Vista 64 Bit. After you download and install BOINC, you can use its setup wizard to add projects and create your preferences. Or if you want a simple way to setup BOINC projects, then try one of the suggested account managers: GridRepublic [13] or BAM! [14] or World Community Grid [15]. The account managers help sync settings to the BOINC manager, divide the workload between different projects, and queue applications based on their report deadline. But the research projects are the same no matter which manager you use since they are run independently by the researchers. The project manager runs from the tray on a schedule or constantly, and it's separate from the BOINC screensaver (installed automatically). Here are general guides for choosing projects:
Since the BOINC project manager runs independent, you don't need to use the BOINC screensaver. You could choose to use some other screensaver or none at all. And the manager itself displays graphics from the projects and allows you to open them in a separate window. You can control many preferences for the BOINC manager. The "simple view" allows you to set workloads to run on a schedule or to connect online only at certain times, limit max CPU and memory use (it may at times go over the max limit you set, but it seems to limit itself to the max you set for each individual task on average), and set it to run only after a certain amount of idle time. It also has a handy "snooze" button that pauses workloads or applications. You can also set preferences online to allow you to import the same settings on multiple computers. The online settings and the local advanced preferences (from the "Advanced view") are more elaborate and allow much more control. For example, after I registered and added a couple of projects, it started to run two applications from the selected projects locally. You can restrict it to use 50% or so of the processors and then it will only run one application at a time. It is not primarily a screensaver, but the screensavers are amazing and show data from the projects. If you have multiple projects, then it automatically changes to the screensaver for whichever project is currently running. See radio signals with SETI@home [10], folding proteins with Rosetta@home [18], constellations and pulsar locations with Einstein@home [19] (my personal favorite so far), etc. The Folding@home software application [20] is based on a similar distributed computing project out of Stanford, except it's now specially designed for its protein folding project (to help look for cures to diseases). I found it interesting that the site says: "our application needs not the hundreds of processors found in modern supercomputers, but hundreds of thousands of processors [like those found in PCs!]. Hence, the calculations performed on Folding@home [21] would not be possible by any other means!" The BOINC site says much the same thing. In other words, only volunteers can make this sort of research possible. There are also many academic papers listed on the folding@home [22] website, and it asserts in the FAQ section that it's completely non-profit and purely academic in nature. II. Play Games for Charity
Each answer you get correct contributes 10 grains of rice to the United Nations World Food Program (WFP). The website loads in a flash and has very minimal clutter. It is by far the best of its kind that I have seen so far. I'm fairly certain that the WFP gets this donation -- I checked the WFP website and it has a huge FreeRice banner in the lower right corner in which they thank it for providing "food rations for over 20,000 refugees from Myanmar who are sheltering in Bangladesh. [In addition] pregnant women in Cambodia, schoolchildren in Uganda and Bhutanese refugees in Nepal received rice thanks to the award-winning site." III. Click a Day SitesThe Hunger Site [25]. Consider clicking everyday at The Hunger Site or one of its other related sites. "The staple food funded by clicks is paid for by site sponsors and distributed to those in need" by two charity partners to help stop hunger: Mercy Corps (3/4 stars on Charity Navigator), Feeding America (formerly America's Second Harvest), and Millennium Promise. In addition the website claims: "100% of sponsor advertising fees goes to our charitable partners. Funds are split between these organizations and go to the aid of hungry people in Africa, Asia, Eastern Europe, the Middle East, Latin America and North America." If you are a supporter of these charities, then you might want to receive an email reminder to click everyday, send ecards, receive their free e-newsletter, link to The Hunger Site, Stumble them and this list(!) to help others to find them, and so on. Dialup visitors may have some problems connecting and it is a slow and high traffic website, but you probably won't have problems at least clicking when you get to the site. One of the best parts about The Hunger Site is the choice to support several different causes operated by CharityUSA/GreaterGood, using the same click a day feature (you can access all of the following from tabs at The Hunger Site or at the following links):
EcologyFund [31]: it's a mess like most CharityUSA sites and I haven't investigated the charities it donates to as of yet (and most aren't listed at the Charity Navigator), but it gets an "excellent" from WOT (with 3 web bugs, more than the usual one -- Google analytics -- for these family of sites above). This is a separate site and not a tab on The Hunger Site, but it is run by the same group.
IV. Charity Search EnginesGoodSearch [45]. Search using GoodSearch to benefit a charity of your choice. This site directs a minimum of 50% of its revenue from advertiser fees to various charities for each valid search. The best part is the flexibility to give to most any charity. For example, I doubt many websites would create an entire free click donation site for something like the Ayn Rand Institute, but I was able to easily name them as a charity. The same would go for many other charities or non-profit organizations (schools, hospitals and clinics, volunteer services, political organizations, fraternal organizations, professional associations, religious organizations, governmental agencies, etc.), but only one at a time. You could also get their toolbar [46] for IE (or add them to your search box for IE, Firefox, or Google Chrome). The search engine is powered by Yahoo!, so if you use it daily it will not decrease the quality of your search results. Plus, you don't have to deal with all the clutter of Yahoo!. You can click on an "Amount Raised" button to track the impact of the site on your charity. It suggests that in the past it has given 1.3 cents per valid search, but they officially estimate that it will be about 1 cent per each valid search. It is sort of like a "penny for charity" searcher! With a high number of visitors the math is favorable: "if 1,000 people search an average of twice a day = $7,300 for charity, and if 10,000 people search an average of twice a day = $73,000 for charity" (per year). I love the idea that it has no maximum level of contribution. It has a minimum of $20.00, but you could always concentrate on your favorite charities that already have sufficient support. If you want to search the site every time for the same charity, then create a custom bookmark or homepage by including the charity ID to the URL: "http://www.goodsearch.com/?charityid=xxxx" [47] (replace "xxxx" with the Charity ID located on the Amount Raised page and leave out the quotes). Warning: Some searches do not count toward charity. These include searches for images, videos, stock quotes, URLs (search terms ending in .com, .org, .net, .edu), well known URLs (HotMail, ESPN, MySpace, Facebook, GMail, AOL, etc.; I don't know if they have a complete listing?), word definitions, Yellow Pages searches, searches without a charity selected, and fraudulent uses of the site. By fraud they mean non-human use of the site or repeated manual clicks (I think they mean that you can't just sit there and click on the same search over and over and over). These actions could get you banned from the site or your charity delisted. The general anti-fraud rule is to use the site as you would any other search engine. This seems like a lot of exceptions and suggests that it's mostly for profit (I would say it's half a profit organization, but many searches do not count for charity). More math: GoodSearch will not send less than $20.00 to any charity, however; and it sends out checks only once per year (in December). So you need to search 2000 times in order to ensure that your charity gets a check of $20.00 ($20.00 divided by .01 cents), which is an average of 6 searches a day for the year. If a charity gets less than $20.00, then the money is allocated to other organizations that have met the minimum (and maybe to an organization you like or do not like?). The best part is that it turns your normal, everyday searching habits into free charity (free for you, anyways) and you get to pick the charity! Other Yahoo! based search engines
V. Volunteer on the Internet
It has a nice news blog, a new section specially for volunteering abroad, a unique forum [50], and an extraordinary section of resources [51]. They have a large database of volunteer opportunities, places to find out about career fairs and graduate fairs, and groups to join to find people like you.
They define "virtual" as having no set location, so some searches may bring back options that are not strictly online opportunities (some may be by phone, mail, etc.). You must register (free) to get contact information and read more about the volunteer listings. It also allows you to use Google Earth to find volunteer needs. But be sure to check out the helpful Google map to locate disaster volunteering opportunities or you might want to read some of the inspirational personal stories of volunteers.
Your search results simply provide links to other volunteer websites, so it is more of a central hub of information and a true mega network of volunteering opportunities. It provides links to VolunteerMatch, Idealist.org, and many other organizations. And it also has an excellent additional list of services: http://www.usafreedomcorps.gov/about_usafc/partners/index.asp [54]. Related Sites:
It easily allows you to search for volunteering, charities, or both. The "Volunteer" tab takes you to a search engine automatically setup to search just volunteering options. Plus it provides several other links and information for volunteering, but I couldn't get all of the links to work so some might be dead. VI. Volunteer in Collaborative Knowledge or Wiki Sites
Wikipedia [61]. The "fourth most visited website" in the world (but ranked 6th right now by Alexa [62]). It's a great resource for its quick updates, broad coverage of information, and quick loading articles. It falls under a charitable organization, called the Wikimedia Foundation (rated 3/4 stars from the Charity Navigator). Wikimedia projects also include:
Open Directory Project [71]. Volunteer editors provide a massive web directory. It's administered by a small staff under the Netscape Communication Corporation. DMOZ stands for Directory Mozilla. I noticed that WOT site advisor works nicely for its listings.
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Others for Quick Reference
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These are other possibilities which were brought up in comments here, noted from other sources, or found in a search engine. As they are not in the review, I am listing them here with brief descriptions and links to their sites for ease of reference.
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Related Products and Links
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Hot Finds at Gizmo's Freeware site:
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