Ask HN: Which companies are doing anything good for the world?
What are some lesser known companies that are doing anything good for the world, and could benefit from my programming skills? [0]
I'm confident platonic-like meta-discussions [1] about what does it mean to do good can be avoided by applying some cheap common sense, so the question is left broad on purpose to fit multiple viewpoints.
Also, it's not like saving children is the only way to fit the profile; I'm sure there are tons of great companies involved with scientific research, activism, helping minorities, saving the whales, fighting global warming, treating loneliness, creating communities for older people, helping butterflies to mate and so on that I never heard of; and I'd love to get up in the morning knowing that my work will do a little more than increasing the GDP and selling ads.
Just to make it clear: I'm not looking down at people who sells ads for a living, but I'm in a very lucky position (white young male from a first-world country, with no debt and nobody depending on me) and I want to leverage this. I guess a lot of like-minded people out there would do the same if they knew where to look. Apologies for the --verbose.
TL;DR: see title
[0] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IXuFrtmOYKg [1] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Form_of_the_Good
7 comments
[ 2.8 ms ] story [ 24.8 ms ] threadSENS: I know this sounds egocentric, but de Grey believes that even if not dying is not achieved, every dollar spent on these research will make people less sick, and that this is not "just for the rich" countries with government provided healthcare will (alredy are?) be pushing and paying for this because people not being sick will make the healthcare system save a lot of money:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SENS_Research_Foundation
Promotheus Research: They are fairly small, and write tools to help researchers digging into data:
http://www.prometheusresearch.com/
https://reschedulemed.com
1. Reduce environmental damage:
This is a tricky objective, if the goal is to reduce the overall negative human impact on the environment, from the context of a company seeking to make profit in an economy where environmental consequences are largely not correctly priced.
* companies that directly or indirectly reduce the increase in global population, in an ethical way. E.g. greater access to contraception, family planning, women's rights. I do not have specific examples.
* companies that reduce the per-capita environmental footprint. E.g. http://taggle.com.au/ sells low cost remote water monitoring sensors, that can be used to detect leaks and reduce overall water consumption.
* where appropriate environmental regulation exists to pay for improvements to the ecosystem, it may be possible for companies to make a profit by e.g. carbon forestry, to compensate for greenhouse gas pollution by others parts of the economy.
2. Help the public access unbiased factual information:
* e.g. https://theconversation.com/ -- not-for-profit online news & opinion from academics & researchers, in AU, UK, US ; currently expanding into Africa.
3. Influence regulation/policy/laws:
* I believe there are plenty of think-tanks doing this, but probably the bulk of them are lobbying for change in directions that largely do not align with long-term public good.
Also, I suspect a lot of companies are exploiting the fact that bright people in our field will be happy to work on stuff they don't believe in as long as you throw interesting problems at them. It's a tradeoff I can understand, but it still is a tradeoff. To answer your question, I'm 25.
* Watsi - https://watsi.org/ - A nonprofit healthcare crowdsourcing platform
* Akvo - http://akvo.org - Akvo builds open source internet and mobile software which is designed to support international development partnership networks, and make cooperation and aid activity more effective and transparent
* DuckDuck Go - https://duck.co/ - Delivering a world-class search engine with great results and great privacy and with open-source instant answers at its core
* Electronic Froniter Foundation https://www.eff.org/
* Greenpeace - http://www.greenpeace.org/
* A bit meta, but good for inspiration: http://www.nonprofittechforgood.com/