CROWDSOURCING AT AOL CASE STUDY Crowdsourcing at AOL Enterprise Information Systems Nova Southeastern University February 16‚ 2014 Abstract America Online (AOL) recently turned to crowdsourcing to help inventory AOL’s immense video library. The large job was broken up into several micro-tasks completed by several different people. This paper will discuss what happened during the crowdsourcing project that took place at AOL.
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department on raids of the tenements‚ witnessing the atrocities firsthand. He mainly used subjects in tenements to expose the various aspects of poverty. His photographs encompass entire families rolling cigars in their tenements‚ men toiling in sweatshops‚ women sewing while starving in attics
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help the country in doing jobs that are needed for a low wage. Therefore blue collar workers are a very important part to society and we need them to thrive. For example in “Made in L.A” there are 3 young Latina immigrants who work in Los Angeles sweatshops they do manual labor for an extremely low wage. Even though they did the same work as others they got paid less because they are immigrants‚ it is hard work with low wages but they continue to do it to support themselves and their family just like
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“Is there such a thing as ethical consumption?” The entire world economy‚ especially the US economy‚ relies on consumers spending. But what happens when consumers overspend their money on things they don’t really need? What happens to all the products that are consumed every day and that people don’t want or need anymore? What is happening to our environment? Where is all this overspending or overconsumption going to take us in our future lives or the coming generation? Here is where I start
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The Working Poor: Invisible in America David K. Shipler David K. Shipler is the author of The Working Poor: Invisible in America‚ also winner of the Pulitzer Prize for his book Arabs and Jews: Wounded Spirits in a Promised Land‚ and a Journalist/ Foreign correspondent for the New York Times. Shipler is a well known author who shows have had plenty of life experiences and education‚ while studying society and trying to understand the
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The Stock Market crash in New York led people to hoard their money; as consumption fell‚ the American economy steadily contracted‚ 1929-32. Given the close economic links between the two countries‚ the collapse quickly affected Canada. Added to the woes of the prairies were those of Ontario and Quebec‚ whose manufacturing industries were now victims of overproduction. Massive lay-offs occurred and other companies collapsed into bankruptcy. This collapse was not as sharp as that in the United States
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traditional culture in transition to a modern one. b. graphically depicts the abuse of native peoples at the hands of more technologically advanced white colonists. c. focuses on what might be called “slave labor” conditions in Third World sweatshops. d. portrays how one man is able to overcome his drug addiction to become the next chief of the
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back. * These reforms were not a complete cave in Western civilization. * Imported Western teachers‚ looked liked westernization. * High taxes in peasantry stimulated Japanese industrialization. * Young girls bought and sent to work in sweatshops were they were housed. * By 1890s‚ able to make modern steamships. * Feudalism gave Japan appreciation on western influence. * Japanese copied from the West. * Japanese beat the Chinese in the war because of their better military and superior
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sports gear. The articles were shoes and soccer balls. Nike then knew then that they had to make some major changes in the way they were producing their items. That article became the topic of the nation and it lead to a protest outside of the sweatshop to stop the child labor practices. It is said that to this day‚ there are still places in and around Pakistan that are continuing to practice this unlawful action against children. It is up to the people of the United States to not support
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7. Horizontal/vertical integration 8. Entrepreneur 9. Corporation 10. American Federation of Labor 11. Haymarket Riot 12. Pullman Strike 13. International Commerce Commission (ICC) 14. Steerage 15. Sweatshop 16. Sherman Anti-Trust Act 17. Karl marx 18. Skyscrapers 19. Push/pull factors of immigration 20. Ellis Island 21. Angel Island 22. “Gilded Age” 23. Americanization Programs 24. Urbanization 25. Vaudeville
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