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by jawns 4271 days ago
A lot of for-profit companies have referral programs (which is what this amounts to), and many of them have a similar multilevel marketing component. So this isn't really anything new or novel.

What I would love to see is an social-media site that is willing to take the concept of sharing profits with its members to the next level and organize itself as a cooperative.

Co-ops, unlike for-profit companies, are entirely owned by their members, and thus any profits they make eventually go back to their members, either in the form of greater investment in the site (which benefits the members) or in the form of rebates (where the profits get divided up and distributed to the member-owners, similar to dividends in the for-profit world).

Of course, the problem with organizing as a co-op is that it's harder to come up with capital, because you can't accept outside investment. But with Kickstarter and Indiegogo and the era of fundraiser-driven product development, I don't think that's as much an issue nowadays.

An added bonus of a social network organized as a co-op is that each member-owner gets a vote -- a genuine say in how things are done -- which is often absent in for-profit companies.

1 comments

check out http://www.favorsome.com/, you may find what you're looking for
I don't see how that's at all relevant to what I was talking about. Favorsome doesn't appear to be a co-op, or anything like one. By the way, I see your only other HN activity is also plugging Favorsome. Kinda spammy?
sorry, I'm new to HN, trying to surf and learn about social networks. my very first post was about Favorsome because I found it interesting.

You're right, Favorsome is not a co-op, but since you're talking about a network reinvesting its profits back into the users, I see that Favorsome is doing the same and thought you'd find it interesting, that's all