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Gov/en/Portal:Economy/Civic-Incentive

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💡 In simple words: This page explains rewards for people who help their community.


⚠️ Not yet approved. This page describes a proposal that is still under community review. It is documented here so it can be discussed, improved and endorsed.


Civic Incentive

From WikiDeal, the Wikipedia of e-commerce

WikiDeal is not just a marketplace — it is an incubator of societal transition. Civic Incentive is the framework through which users become active contributors rather than passive consumers. This is a vast challenge, approached in a creative and diversified way: every idea is welcome as long as it meets quality criteria. Multiple mechanisms are deployed and tested, from pricing signals to community funding, with pilot experiences across many different domains.

Civic Incentive (Incitation Citoyenne) encompasses multiple mechanisms, all in the spirit of rewarding engagement and building belonging. Here are some examples — more will emerge through Open Calls and experimentation:

  • Flex Pricing (Pilot 1, Prototype 1) — A soft adjustment of commission rates based on individual civic participation.
  • Underused Resources — Families offering guest meals, shared vehicles, unused residences brought into the community economy.
  • Representation Rights — Active contributors earn the right to represent WikiDeal at events and in governance commissions.
  • Waves — Financial incentives to create new User Groups in strategic domains (arbitration, housing, transport…)

Inspired by the co-production of knowledge across traditions, cultures, and the ethic of socio-ecological inclusion (as practised by communities like Karampuang in Indonesia and theorised as Wikinomics), Civic Incentive is grounded in Communities of Practice in the sense described by Etienne Wenger. Almost all User Groups are Communities of Practice. There also exist informal Communities of Practice that are not yet constituted as User Groups but whose contributions are equally valued.

Types of Civic Incentives to Explore

Civic Incentive is a broad, open framework. Many mechanisms will be progressively discovered, tested, and refined through community experimentation. Prototype 1 launches with a first pilot; more will follow.

Civic Flex Pricing — Pilot 1 (Prototype 1)

The system does not alter the core commission model, but applies a Soft Flex to it. Every User Group (acting as a Community of Practice organizing an activity) can claim a certain surcharge from passive users, while granting distinct advantages (discounts) to active contributors.

This Flex Rate is directly correlated to the user's individual involvement, but it also adapts to the nature and maturity of the specific market:

  • Active Participation (The Discount): If a user regularly votes, performs community work, or attends celebrations, their individual commission rate will drop. The average discount is typically around 5%, 10%, or 20% off the base commission.
  • Passive Users (The Surcharge): If a user chooses not to get involved, they are subject to a civic surcharge. If the community is highly active, the surcharge for opting out is stronger, serving as a live indicator of community vitality. If the community is barely active, the surcharge remains weak.
  • Market Maturity: Calculation models are adapted by each Community of Practice. The more mature and widely adopted a marketplace becomes, the less mandatory civic implication it requires, naturally stabilizing the Flex Rate over time.

This creates an honest, double evolution: rewarding engagement while maintaining stability.

The 3 Pillars of Participation

Users are incentivized to engage in three dimensions — and Communities of Practice can scale their impact by organizing events (from micro-gatherings to large fairs) where these three dimensions happen simultaneously.

1. Deliberation

Participation goes beyond merely voting. It involves engaging in debates, expressing opinions, and organizing activities to promote specific options or trends when community choices are presented.

2. Community Work

More than just physical tasks, community work is specifically considered a moment of collective organization and support for trends or initiatives chosen as priority beneficiaries of community efforts. Contributing individually or in teams generates an exchange of Miles—a parallel currency of mutual support.

Note: Does earning Miles automatically reduce your Cash commission? By default, no. However, the exact boundaries of fixed vs. variable cross-rewards are typical subjects to be debated and evolved through community Open Calls.

3. Celebrations

The convivial dimension of WikiDeal. Participating as an audience member or active partner in community events. These celebrations can be festive, meditative, or take any other form—it is entirely up to each specific Community of Practice to define what constitutes a celebration. Failing to attend any such available gathering over a period triggers the surcharge.

Verification: Participation is validated through digital check-ins, geolocation records, and semi-formal peer validations.

Other Incentive Types (to explore)

The following are additional incentive types to explore and test. The list will grow through Open Calls:

  • Underused Resources into the Economy: Proactive encouragement to contribute idle resources — unused secondary residences, vehicles, food. Example: a programme where families offer guest meals at defined hours and locations, open to inscription.
  • Flex Pricing (primary use case): Commission adjustments linked to civic participation (deliberation, community work, celebrations).
  • Community Representation Rights: Active contributors earn the right to represent the WikiDeal community at events, in public communications, and in relevant commissions.
  • Preliminary Analysis Seats: For active Market contributors — the right to sit in pre-evaluation or analysis committees, giving voice to practitioners in the governance of their own marketplace.
  • Waves (Priority Community Building): Financial incentives to create new User Groups in strategic domains (e.g., arbitration groups, cooperative housing groups). See below.

This list will grow and evolve through Prototype 1 experiments and community Open Calls. All types of civic incentives must meet quality criteria before being deployed at scale.

Community Funding & Waves

Beyond pricing signals, Civic Incentive also involves direct funding of community activities. WikiDeal issues periodic Waves: targeted calls to create new User Groups (Communities of Practice) in domains considered strategically important, with financial incentives to support their emergence.

For example, one early priority is the emergence of strong arbitration communities: groups of trusted mediators who ensure that users engaging in deals feel safe, protected, and supported by a reliable arbitration environment. Financial incentives are designed to attract people to build this infrastructure before it is needed at scale.

Waves are not limited to arbitration. Any domain identified as a community priority can trigger a Wave: User Groups focused on cooperative housing, peer-to-peer services, street fundraising protocols, and more.