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  1. Description From the Wikipedia: "The overjustification effect (also called the undermining effect or Oversufficient Justification) is the effect whereby giving someone an incentive (monetary or otherwise) to do something that they already enjoy doing decreases their ...

  2. Instead stamp scrip is a form of community-generated credit, whereby a payment levied on the use of the scrip builds up a fund to redeem the scrip. In practice, stamp scrip took the form of certificates to which a special stamp had to be affixed each time the scrip was used (transactions-based scrip, championed by Charles Zylstra), or every ...

  3. 2011年6月13日 · From the Wikipedia: "Fureai kippu (Caring Relationship Tickets) is a Japanese community currency created in 1995 by the Sawayaka Welfare Foundation so that people could earn credits helping seniors in their community. The basic unit of account is an hour of service to an elderly person. Sometimes seniors help each other and earn the credits ...

  4. Description Via J.P. Morgan: "Reputation" Another key factor in what makes us who we are is our standing in the world. A person’s online persona, the number of Twitter followers they have - the conferences they have attended, the fact that they were early adopters ...

  5. The B of B of Joy doesn’t only stand for bank. It stands also for Awareness, Citizen and Movement. As soon as the Movement is big enough, we will instigate referenda, so that citizens can determine policies themselves. For example: in Switzerland all citizens can vote on important issues. B of Joy is of service to people, nature and society.

  6. Emily Parker: "Xinchejian, founded in 2010, means "new workshop." It occupies a rented room in a Shanghai warehouse. Members pay around $16 a month to use the space and tools, and on Wednesday nights it is open to the public. The Taiwan-born David Li, a 40-year-old programmer and a co-founder of Xinchejian, wants to lower the barriers for ...

  7. By Anjana Ahuja. [1] Excerpt: “From dog-walking to rubbish clearance, civic-minded Estonians can now draw on a virtual Bank of Happiness which trades in good deeds. Anjana Ahuja reports from Tallinn. On one level, it was just a haircut. Peeter, a middle-aged IT manager, entrusted his diminishing locks to Nele, a young craftswoman armed with ...

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