What is it that motivates you to "participate" in online communities?
January 4, 2005 5:34 PM
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What is it that motivates you to "participate" in online communities? Why do you share your thoughts, feelings, ideas and creativity with faceless others online?
Is it the “give-and-take”; the barter or exchange of some sort of currency (money, favors, or a sense of “doing good for others”)? Is it the opportunity to share our thoughts, creativity with other? To collaborate; to connect?
Why do so many of us maintain online journals?
I think the concept of “reputonics” – which I first came across in
Steven Weber's recent book – "
The Success of Open Source” – points to a powerful motivating factor.
Steven Levy’s article in this week’s Newsweek magazine ("
They Hacked Real Good, For Free ") profiles the "
Graphing Calculator Story" (previously discussed
here on MeFi). While not pertinent to online activity, the article touches on similar motivations - “a reminder that what drives our most original work is not always the almighty buck”
posted by ericb to human relations (47 comments total)
I used to provide a lot of free web services. I guess I still do but I don't advertise them or push them any more so they don't get used. I used to write and give away a lot of software but I didn't have time to support it and got crushed under the weight of it (Mathowie, I know how you must feel some times). Providing a free service that is related to something you are passionate about can be a burden.
posted by RustyBrooks at 5:48 PM on January 4, 2005