๐Ÿ•ธ๏ธOnline Skill Sharing

Digital education and skill sharing has been developing since 1983 when a group of educators, psychologists and computer scientists met at โ€˜The Conference on Joint Problem Solving and Microcomputersโ€™ at the University of San Diego. Their conference was an early formal investigation into using digital technologies to share knowledge between experts and students. Since then, with the advent of the World Wide Web, education has developed into online universities, โ€˜Massive Open Online Coursesโ€™ and YouTube. More than 100 million users regularly access online learning sites.

โ€‹Weaverly will enable content creators to exchange their knowledge with communities without the need to rely on advertising revenue, obscure algorithms and extractive contracts. Platform users will decide what skills and knowledge are relevant to them through transparent feedback and usage statistics. This will influence the popularity of content, as well as creator rewards, encouraging true community sensemaking.

Last updated