WikiDeal:Key Features: Difference between revisions

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adding an introduction as usecases and development framework
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'''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 ==