WikiDeal:Key Features: Difference between revisions
No edit summary |
adding an introduction as usecases and development framework |
||
| Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
'''WikiDeal in a nutshell? The Wikipedia of deals.''' | |||
WikiDeal is a community & platform providing models of contracts to sell, rent, employ, share... | |||
Like on Wikipedia, you can freely access, edit and adapt these contracts, for any context and needs. Each model is connected to a community of users, providing comments and feedback. | |||
'''Who owns WikiDeal? It's a common owned by its users.''' | |||
Users can contribute in developing the platform’s technology, legal support and new marketplaces. Coaching to design and adapt deals, mediation & arbitration for fair compensation… | |||
'''How is it governed?''' | |||
WikiDeal gathers the highest standards on ethics, privacy, customer support, free licensing, low costs and high efficiency, inspired by the Wikipedia participative governance. | |||
'''SERVICES''' | |||
The '''Minimum Viable Product''' (MVP) is planned to provide the following wiki-managed features: | |||
* Models of ''ready to use and customizable'' '''contracts (“deals”)''', agreements and rules of functioning. | |||
** Each contract includes optional '''clauses''' to help make fair deals, such as adapted conditions of payment, simplified arbitration for conflicts and easy authentication of signatures. | |||
** Each clause of each contract is easy to adapt, '''edit''', comment, explain and refer to laws and stats. | |||
* Automated scenarios helping dealers '''select and respect each clause of their deals,''' raising awareness with ''tutorials'', ''reminders'', ''amendments'', ''alerts'', ''stats''… | |||
* Conflict prevention and resolution between WikiDealers using '''coaching, mediation''' and '''arbitration.''' | |||
* Anonymized big data for '''risk management, including ''incentives'' & ''compensation'' tools''' such as benchmarks on pricing and fines, reputation and karma management, social and ecological impact. | |||
* Fair deal '''enclosure options''' (executing, canceling & resiliating with compensations, transfer). | |||
'''Which deals are we talking about?''' | |||
First, ''peer-to-peer'' deals for everyday life, including: | |||
* Services such as transportation, freelance, internship… | |||
* Renting goods (functional economy) including hosting, vehicles, clothes… | |||
* Buying and selling (ticketing for shows, real estate, food, machines…). | |||
* Loans of goods without middle men (from loaning funds to books or bikes). | |||
* Partnership (employment, pre-nuptial/marriage/divorce, co-owning goods…) | |||
* All other types of deals humans can imagine. | |||
Then, deals with multiple stakeholders, such as: | |||
* Leasing including three parts: buyers, sellers and loaners (banks, insurance, funds…). | |||
* Social contracts and rules for shared real estate, such as condominiums and communities. | |||
* Private-public partnership, such as those to protect forests or assess quality of products. | |||
* Franchising agreement (such as those between TED Foundation and TEDx event licensees). | |||
* Joint ventures (from co-working to buying shares of a company). | |||
* Pedagogical signage to respect deals, such as waste management rules on a public toilet. | |||
== Components == | == Components == | ||