At Penguicon, attendees can sign up at the convention to earn rewards by doing simple things like carrying boxes, guarding doors, or changing DVDs. We think it would be cool to create a record of that for your permanent positive reputation. It's called "Whuffie" -- a term from Cory Doctorow's science fiction novel Down And Out In The Magic Kingdom. It's a unit of measure in a reputation economy.
A currency system will increase volunteerism by letting volunteers maximize its value to them based on their circumstances and what they need help with. I'm designing a Whuffie currency printed on marbled cardstock. The bills will picture this year's Guests of Honor. The attendance badges and currency will use a barcode system to track individual work throughout multiple years.
One Whuffie = 1 hour of work. (Loading and unloading the moving truck, and any work done setting up beforehand and breaking down afterward earns 1.5 Whuffie per hour.) Each concom person who needs volunteers gets an amount of Whuffie currency to distribute, according to the volunteerism hours they expect to need filled. It is against the rules for concom to spend it themselves, give it to non-volunteers, or use it for any other non-intended purpose. But they can give bonuses for those who do an awesome job.
Here's a menu of things we intend to offer. We reserve the right to adjust it at the convention.
- Redeem 1 Whuffie to Tracy Worcester, Anna Petrak, or the convention Operations desk, per night of crash space, at the time of access to a hotel room shared among volunteers. There is one room for men and one room for women. Bring your own sleeping bag.
- Redeem 1 Whuffie to Jer Lance on Saturday or Sunday morning to jump to the head of the line for free pancakes and eggs.
- Redeem 1 Whuffie with Chuck Child for a plate of Brazilian Beef during a scheduled serving on Saturday afternoon. No reimbursements; if you already registered for it, this is redeemed to be served seconds.
- Redeem 1 Whuffie with MythLogic for 1 hour of play on one of their LAN party rental stations.
- Redeem 2 Whuffie with Jessica Zerwas on Sunday for reimbursement of your 2008 LAN party weekend-admission wristband.
- Redeem 3 Whuffie in the dealer room for a Penguicon 2008 t-shirt.
- Redeem 3 Whuffie to Aaron Thul on Sunday for a free weekend seat at Penguicon's MPCon LAN party 2009. This is the first opportunity to get on the list, to guarantee your seat.
- Redeem 4 Whuffie with Aaron Thul on Sunday for a free registration to Penguicon 2009.
- Redeem 5 Whuffie with Jessica Zerwas on Sunday for reimbursement of your 2008 convention badge, if the convention broke even.
January 22 2008, 06:21:53 UTC 4 years ago
I like the idea - but for some reason I see T-Bob (the one who was at Fusion) jumping up and doing everything and anything possible in order to amass a huge pocket full of Whuffie in order to consume as much food as possible. You need to place further limitations, spelled out clearly, on the food redemption (limit to two servings procured in this manner unless supply allows perhaps?).
I like that it has benefits for people who, perhaps, are only staying one day and cannot justify the usual number of hours. This way they can, if nothing else, get instant gratification of playable or edible nature.
Are we intending these to be absolutely transferable or placing limitations upon who is authorized to transfer units of Whuffie? This is a major consideration to me because it affects the maximum that people can amass and redeem and in turn affects the adjusted value (which can make or break the convention in terms of payouts).
January 22 2008, 15:49:23 UTC 4 years ago
No way. No limitation. Believe me, supply will not be a problem. If T-Bob works eight hours before Saturday afternoon, and redeems it on Saturday afternoon for eight servings of steak, the program has been a success beyond my wildest aspirations. Unfortunately, anything that involves runaway volunteerism is the least likely outcome.
January 23 2008, 06:09:38 UTC 4 years ago
Personally I like the option of registering for next year. My question with regards to that is...say one person has 8 Whuffie and wants to pre-register themselves and a friend/spouse/random dude they met while volunteering who didn't have much Whuffie? Would that be allowed?
January 23 2008, 16:18:54 UTC 4 years ago
The point of a reputation economy, differing from a normal economy, is that Whuffie can be gained but not transferred. We plan to use bar codes on badges and currency for this purpose. At first, the only ones who can use the bar code scanners and interface with our Whuffie tracking software will be the convention committee. Possibly in future years we'll expand it so that anyone with high Whuffie can generate new Whuffie on someone else.
January 23 2008, 16:42:20 UTC 4 years ago
I guess if we're low on volunteers it's a good thing that I'm bringing in people who are eager to volunteer.
Anonymous
April 18 2010, 12:33:29 UTC 2 years ago
whuffie transfer
"The point of a reputation economy, differing from a normal economy, is that Whuffie can be gained but not transferred."Disagree. whuffie is properly highly transferable. In a gift economy when you accumulate a lot of stuff you gain status by giving it away. Wnen you accumulate status your opinion about others is taken more seriously. Transfer of whuffie is an important tracking mechanism for this process. What good is whuffie if you can't give it away? It should not be commoditized however, so trading whuffie for anything is properly improper. Cashing whuffie in for real goods and services should only be done where the goods and services are donations. Otherwise you will reinvent money, and soon you will have capitalist corporate exploitation. Even then be wary: sometimes the people with the most need have the least whuffie. It's about gifts - the more you give, the more you put into the system, the higher your status. If you support giving only for the purpose of getting, it fails.
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Anonymous
April 12 2008, 17:55:10 UTC 4 years ago
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May 8 2008, 15:53:18 UTC 4 years ago
Interested in Hearing How It Went
Just followed a link from Cory's site and was curious about how the Whuffie system worked.May 8 2008, 21:59:40 UTC 4 years ago
Re: Interested in Hearing How It Went
I think it went pretty well. We had somewhat more volunteers than usual. We're about to expand it to a permanent online record.May 8 2008, 22:04:31 UTC 4 years ago
Re: Interested in Hearing How It Went
Nice. I absolutely love the idea of whuffie in real life. I just wrote a really brief article about it, hoping to generate some discussion about not only whuffie but voting online in general, on my Newsvine column. Let me know if you are interested in it, I hate to put links on other folks' LJs. :DMay 9 2008, 01:47:46 UTC 4 years ago
Re: Interested in Hearing How It Went
I'm absolutely interested! Don't feel bad about links on my LJ on my account. But if you want, you can email it to me at my gmail account, matt dot mattarn.May 9 2008, 16:46:56 UTC 4 years ago
Re: Interested in Hearing How It Went
Cool. The article is entitle Is Newsvine Moving Us Toward a Whuffie Economy. It's not getting as much traffic as I hoped. I suspect it's not controversial enough. I'm trying to get people interested. I <3 Whuffie.