Last updated 2 years ago
Some endangered animals should be protected by all of us because the stability of our ecosystem depends on them.
Seriously endangered species such as: Giraffe, Elephant, Bonobos, PANGOLINS, etc.
We are turning cleaning the planet into a game! By doing the work, users earn Littercoin which will become a carbon sink for Cardano. Every day, 100s of data points are uploaded to openlittermap.
This is the total amount allocated to Littercoin: Mass Adoption.
We are turning cleaning the planet into a game! By doing the work, users earn Littercoin which will become a carbon sink for Cardano. Every day, 100s of data points are uploaded to openlittermap.
Geographer + software developer. Developing OpenLitterMap since 2008 and Littercoin since 2015. Worked as a divemaster in the tropics where I got lots of inspiration. Did 2 masters to develop the methodologies then taught myself how to code. First funding from Catalyst in Fund 4.
Summary:
Abstract:
At OpenLitterMap, we are turning cleaning the planet into a game with real climate rewards. This means we want to get our global community discounted access to locally produced zero-waste organic fruits, nuts, seeds, and vegetables for using our app. Stakepools and other users interested in offsetting their carbon emissions will be attracted to accumulate ada in the Littercoin Smart Contract, which gives every Littercoin value. However, only pre-approved green-listed stakeholders in the climate economy can exchange Littercoin for ada. This careful combination of a fun data collection experience combined with a climate-friendly incentive will help unlock societies data collection capacity, stimulate “climatokeveganomics”, and transform our knowledge about global pollution which has been restricted and controlled by centralised science funding agencies who have failed to protect the environment and are due be disrupted.
About:
Our growing global community is actively collecting data about the problems they are finding and improvements they are making in their communities (e.g. picking up & documenting litter, dumping, overflowing bins, etc) every day. We are empowering people who care about the environment with tools to crowdsource important open source data about the litter and plastic pollution epidemic globally. About 1 billion people already have access to a powerful hand-sized geolocated supercomputing data collection instrument (a smartphone), however societies data collection capacity remains significantly underdeveloped. We have learned how to use these devices to share and consume information (via text, links, memes) which has resulted in a huge awakening of global pollution. This change from a one-way top-down authoritative narrative to an ongoing bottom up social dialogue was so profound, it changed mainstream political and corporate dialogue globally, almost overnight. Once people had access to the technology that easily allowed them to share and consume information, society developed an online consciousness that has led to a social awakening. Social media 1.0 empowered people to share information. Now we need to explore social media 2.0 that is getting people to actively use their data collection instrument to collect real factual data about the world around them. Our ability at harnessing the data collection capacity of this unprecedented human potential (what we call “citizen science”) remains significantly underdeveloped simply because the funding does not exist to develop the technology. If Catalyst supports this proposal, the tools will become available for society to use which will grow and develop humanities social consciousness. Unlocking this global data collection capacity will transform our knowledge about how badly polluted the world is and what can be done about it. At OpenLitterMap, our interactive tools visualise the problem which will educate society about the scale of this globally ubiquitous problem, and the code and data is open for students, universities and governments to adopt and collaborate on. This data can be used to enforce producer pays responsibilities and improve the location and implementation of public services, eg. bins, ashtrays, community budget allocations, evaluate changes in policy, and more.
OpenLitterMap got its first funding from Project Catalyst in Fund 4 which has been a huge help to debug and improve the platform. Fund 4 is still ongoing but will end soon with the launch of the Littercoin token. However, much more work needs to be done to develop citizen science, give littercoin value and utility, and unlock societies data collection capacity. There is a huge opportunity for Catalyst to disrupt science funding and pioneer the development of open source citizen science tools and then lead the way by introducing innovative standards for the tokenization of environmental activity. Our open source code is being designed to be a good starting point for anyone interested in starting their own citizen science project and has been referenced in several Nature and other academic papers dozens of times by people working at the United Nations Environment Programme and more (see openlittermap.com/references). As Littercoin is the first token rewarded for producing geographic information, we are doing our best to set high standards and differentiate it from the rest of crypto. For example, Littercoin will not be listed on any exchange. You cannot buy Littercoin as it can only be earned. Sending it anywhere other than our smart contract will automatically make the Littercoin void and the smart contract will no longer accept it. Our smart contract will look at the transaction history of each token and only accept tokens which meet our non-tradable standards which means no swapping for another token and no exchanges. Unlike fiat and increasingly Bitcoin which has literally incentivised the destruction of natural resources, the only trading you can do with Littercoin is for fruit and vegetables. The point of Littercoin is not to make anyone monetarily rich. We want to make EVERYONE rich by creating a climate friendly economic incentive that can onboard huge numbers of people into citizen science and the climate economy to raise social consciousness and climate + dog friendly economic activity. We want to link our environmentally-active users with stakeholders in the climate economy (eg. zero waste shops, local organic gardens) to tackle waste and climate change at source. Littercoin is not some kind of number go up technology that you should hold. Littercoin is number go down technology that is designed to help society improve its scientific, environmental and geospatial literacy while bypassing the economic system to link human data collectors with organic farms to fix problems associated with capitalism, plastic and climate problems simultaneously.
Littercoin is an important token for the mass adoption of crypto, as users do not need to sign up to an exchange and risk losing money to get started. Simply walk around the corner and start collecting information about your local environmental surroundings to participate in the network. Most of our users know nothing about crypto, but are passively onboarded by being interested in collecting data about the environment. Due to its low barrier to entry, Littercoin has potential to become the first token that many people earn. Our app works, but a lot more work is needed across gamification, UI/UX, machine learning and marketing to make mining Littercoin as fun, impactful, and environmentally rewarding as possible.
We want stakepools to offset their carbon footprint by accumulating ada in the Littercoin Smart Contract which will give every Littercoin value. However, only green-listed zero waste stores and other approved stakeholders in the climate economy will be able to trade Littercoin for ada. You can think of Littercoin as climate currency that cannot be spent in the fossil fuel economy or in the 10 companies who own 90% of the products in your local supermarket.
As we begin to unlock societies data collection capacity, our knowledge about global pollution is ripe for distribution. Traditionally, science was facilitated by a small number of experts, who worked for institutions that had a monopoly on what kinds of knowledge could be produced. This sampling-paradigm is still ongoing today, despite imposing considerably narrow limitations on the scientific method which has failed to protect the environment. We want to change this paradigm by empowering society with powerful open source data collection technology to radically change what who is allowed to participate and what kinds of knowledge can be created. This will open significant implications for producer responsibility, taxes, enforcement, educational content, laws, political dialogue, and other questions like why are some areas better resourced than others. The hardest part of citizen science was getting about 1 billion data collection instruments (smartphones) into the hands of our global population but this step is already done. We have learned how to use these devices to share information, but we have not yet scratched the surface of what is capable by exploiting the fundamental purpose of our device which is to collect and process data. Just as the Geographers in the 1960s rose from their qualitative armchairs and started collecting quantitative data about the world, it is time that we turn our devices from our faces to the realverse and use our instruments to explore the quality of the world around us in which all humans are destined to live.
By supporting this proposal, we will be able to continue showcasing Catalyst as the most disruptive and innovative funding tool at various events and conferences around the world that we attend including high level plenaries across UN, UNEP, Universities, Intergovernmental organisations, NGOs and others. There is a huge opportunity for Catalyst to become an important impact-seed funding instrument and I hope the community will consider supporting my 15 year commitment to citizen science. When this project is successful, I have more projects that I am ready to start working on right away.
Every student and university in the world has shared access to OpenLitterMap code and data which is rightly placed to become a universal tool that society can adopt. I hope catalyst voters will see the potential impact of these initiatives and support the development of Littercoin which I would love to see become a flagship product on Cardano that separates us from the rest of crypto.
"If you don't like your money... create new money" - CH @ Virtual Summit 2021
KPI 1. Increasing the number of dapps and products available for the community to use that help to enrich the ecosystem with new use cases
KPI 2. Increase the number of integrations that bring existing solutions together for a more seamless and connected experience between different products.
KPI 3. Increased quality of existing products & integrations through suggested improvements that is supported by customer feedback or increased usage by the community.
Litter mapping is an important catalyst to unlock societies data collection capacity, as litter is globally ubiquitous, easily identifiable and notoriously bad for the environment. These characteristics give litter mapping a remarkably low barrier to entry that can enable huge numbers of people to get started in the scientific and public process, while passively onboarding them into the cardano ecosystem.
Governments have purposefully neglected the development of citizen science and pollution monitoring tools. There is a unique opportunity for Project Catalyst to fill this gap and create high standards for citizen science and its tokenisation. With this funding we will continue to build on OpenLitterMap, start working on the OpenLitterAI using our 300,000+ images to train a real-time litter detector, which is an important part of our plans for making this fun and interactive experience.
Our fund 4 funding is still ongoing, which has helped us debug and improve our app, work on the Littercoin concept, and will finish with the launch of the Littercoin token, but the smart contract needs to be developed to distribute Littercoin and to give Littercoin value and utility. Our smart contact will automate distribution of Littercoin token holders to those who have submitted a cardano wallet and who have pre-mined Littercoin in the database. The smart contract will also accumulate ada via staking rewards, which will give every Littercoin value. We will then invite zero-waste stakeholders and others in the climate economy to apply to attract new customers, who will be able to bring our users into their economy and use their Littercoin to receive a discount. Stakepools should be incentivised to participate as giving people discounted access to zero-waste fruits + vegetables will help offset the carbon used by maintaining the network, making cardano the most impactful, delicious and healthy climate-friendly web3 platform in the world.
The biggest challenge we currently face is educating people about why collecting this data is important. This is followed by why the code and data on pollution needs to be open. Collecting this data is important because it can create powerful story-telling educational tools and powerful immersive visualisations. By harnessing the power of the crowd, we will begin to explore the potential of societies global data collection capacity. Although ~99% of documented litter is picked up and recorded by known superusers who want to record their positive environmental impact, collecting data about litter problems you don't have the time and ability to clean up at certain times is also a welcome step as it can help visualise and educate against the problem. We encourage participation at cleanup events and encourage people to make the effort when possible, but if you are rushing to work and see loads of broken glass, you might not have time to pick it up, but you can collect an important data point that can help society react and improve our understanding of the problem. Some people think that doing all of this work, cleaning up, documenting, is too much, and this is true. Very few people want to do everything (incl. take photos, pick up, tag, review, code) but at OpenLitterMap, there is something for everyone and no matter how small. Everyone has an important role to play. Some people don't like taking photos or picking up litter, but they play an important role helping us manually review and tag the data of others, draw bounding boxes on images to help train the AI, code, be a part of the community, inspire others, make videos, write papers, and there are more opportunities emerging.
Some people think that if you can cheat and earn Littercoin, we should not innovate and explore the tokenomics of citizen science to improve our ability at unlocking societies data collection capacity to mitigate the estimated 900 tonnes of plastic entering the oceans every hour. This has been a non-issue so far as Littercoin is not intended to make anyone rich. We encourage people to break, test, experiment and copy our ideas to make them better. If people try to cheat at earning Littercoin by dumping litter, not only is this more difficult than discovering the litter that already exists, but that would help us get access to exactly the kind of person we want to educate. Presumably, a small number of people will try to cheat gamified citizen science systems but this will pale in significance to the much larger resource of excellent quality data provided by known superusers and other trustworthy players. It is our duty as scientists to try and explore how humans interact with public data collection tools, which our open data allows. Littercoin is not intended to be bulletproof. Rather, it is intended to be a simple introduction to crypto, easy enough that anyone can do it, but long and boring enough that anyone trying to cheat the network will get bored, as they will be unable to get 100 images past verification in a row to earn a single Littercoin. If someone did cheat our system and earn some littercoin, the worst that would happen is they would get discounted access to the climate economy.
After educating people about why collecting data on the global pollution problem is important, and then on why open science is important for pollution monitoring, the next challenge is getting people to use the app. Other apps exist that have been well funded years ago however most of them are not open, and not many people question the implications of using closed-source tools to create restricted access to data on pollution. Closed pollution monitoring tools make it fun to protect polluters, which are actively supported by polluters, as they control and restrict access to data, education tools, enforcement tools, and make volunteer effort largely redundant. Guided by open science principles and inspired by OpenStreetMap, we apply open source values to polluting monitoring. We are building our community by hosting weekly community calls where we release weekly updates live on production. This helps keep the most active community members engaged (you can read about them at https://medium.com/weeklyOLM) and helps onboard more people into a visibly active network. Will you join us?
Prior to catalyst, we have spent about 15 years researching, including 5+ years software development bringing OpenLitterMap where it was last year.
Thanks to funding from catalyst,
Moving forwards
OpenLitterMap has been debugged and many improvements have been made. Now it is time to complement our existing team with a designer, marketing/social media person, a machine learning engineer, a new frontend, mobile and Plutus developer to reach the next stage.
Q1 (August - October): New recruits hired, designer starts shaping future direction for frontend web + mobile interfaces. Plutus developer begins working on the Littercoin smart contract. Machine learning developer starts working on the OpenLitterAI to enable real-time object detection gaming experience. New languages get added and user signups increase.
Q2 (November - December): Littercoin smart contract ready for audit. Re-design of frontend interfaces and new features start getting released. OpenLitterAI v0.1 launches, allowing other universities to participate in the AI. The object detection makes tagging significantly easier for users, which will cause an increase in data collection, making it extremely fun + easy to start mining Littercoin. Huge improvements to gamification experience begin to get released in preparation for school data collection competition next year.
Q3 (January - March): Littercoin smart contract ready for testing by pilot users. OpenLitterAI receives feedback from initial testing and a new and improved version is released. OpenLitterMap is now approaching MVP.
Q4 (April - June): Full roll-out of Littercoin begins including onboarding zero waste stores + stakeholders in the climate economy. Our school data collection competition launches, which will test and evaluate societies baseline citizen science capacity. This results in a peer-reviewed publication which will showcase catalysts’ real-world scientific and environmental social impact potential.
As a Fund 4 recipient, we have been very cautious about the funding in the past. The income from this funding has finished. At the time of writing, we still have 17,000 ada remaining which you can see in this public google sheets document
https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1OWy_bXu9Eeh7bSA0KLarP9TSQg7XJKKqPMGxiRTbAFk/edit#gid=0
We have been very cautious and economic with this funding which has transformed openlittermap and will end with the launch of the Littercoin token.
Significantly more work needs to be done, and we need to bring developers into our team for at least 12 months, to grow and build an incredible product that can achieve mass adoption and enable us to execute the business plan with smart cities and institutional clients.
x1 Senior web + backend developer @ $50,000 ($25/hour)
x1 Intermediate web + backend developer @ $35,000 ($20/hour)
x1 Senior mobile developer @ $50,000 ($25/hour)
x1 Intermediate mobile developer @ $35,000 ($20/hour)
x1 Designer: $25,000 ($20/hour)
x1 Social media + marketing $20,000 ($15/hour)
x1 Plutus developer: $50,000 ($85/hour)
x1 AI Engineer $50,000 ($25/hour)
x1 CTO + CEO = management, code review, full stack developer, business development, outreach, sales, marketing: $50,000 ($25/hour)
Total salaries = $365,000
+10% overhead = 36,500
+$18,500 Marketing, travel, resources, documentation, legal + accounting fees
Small donation to local dog charity on project completion: $69
Total Budget: 420,069
If you are interested in any of these positions, please get in touch
Founder, CEO, CTO, CFO - Seán Lynch
Senior web + backend developer #1 - Geni
Intermediate developer to help Geni: required
Senior react native mobile app developer: required
Intermediate react native developer:
UI/UX + graphic designer: required
Marketing + social media person: required
Plutus engineer: required
AI Engineer: required
I have dozens of more plans for citizen science and web3 apps so yes, once I can prove this we will be back for more!
We will continue to provide an improved cost breakdown on google spreadsheet for every spend.
We will complement this with a monthly report on team, progress, updates and expenditure that will become a landmark project for transparency on Catalyst.
There will be open access to every invoice & proof of funds at all times.
Included in the monthly report will be a link to each significant github commit which you can already review on github.com/openlittermap
We already host a weekly community call, followed by a weekly blog post about our progress. We will be able to complement this with weekly edited videos showcasing our progress and community development.
All of our code and data is open source, hence why its called OpenLitterMap.
Progress is already being measured by:
We will be able to build on this funding and improve all of these metrics. In addition, we will be able to track the ada/dollar value of each Littercoin and list/map the stores + stakeholders in the climate economy that are looking for new climate friendly customers.
OpenLitterMap becomes a landmark citizen science project and catalyst demonstrates its real-world impact.
Littercoin becomes a carbon sink for Cardano, offsetting the emissions caused by the network.
OpenLitterMap becomes significantly more developed, helping to unlock global data collection capacity and causing a paradigm shift in how we think about educational activity, pollution monitoring and the devices we carry around everywhere.
Littercoin will become the first token that most people obtain in the years after project completion, onboarding many people into Cardano.
We will produce an outstanding open source data collection experience that can be improved, forked, debugged, and replicated by anyone else interested in citizen science.
This data collection experience will be combined with an incentive that will change the narrative about crypto being a ponzi scheme that is bad for the environment.
We will cause many people to question the integrity of fiat currency that has been disproportionately given by banks to the permanent plastic polluters and climate wreckers. Despite having access to unlimited magic money printers, banks + governments have failed to support the development of citizen science.
Once fully developed, we will be able to use Littercoin to help incentivise global environmental action and produce the most rapid production of global data the world has ever seen.
We got our first funding in Fund 4 ($50,000) which helped debug openlittermap, add many new features, and help shape the tokenomics and future steps to develop the entire ecosystem which Littercoin is a small but important part of.
OpenLitterMap covers 16/17 SDGs
https://openlittermap.medium.com/openlittermap-and-the-sdgs-ea3567d5085e
Geographer + software developer. Developing OpenLitterMap since 2008 and Littercoin since 2015. Worked as a divemaster in the tropics where I got lots of inspiration. Did 2 masters to develop the methodologies then taught myself how to code. First funding from Catalyst in Fund 4.