YourView

Last updated

YourView
YourView logo.png
Type of businessNot-for-profit
Type of site
Debate, deliberative democracy
Available inEnglish
FoundedMay 2012
Headquarters,
OwnerOurView Foundation
Founder(s) Tim van Gelder
URL yourview.org.au
Current statusInactive

YourView is an Australian not-for-profit debate website, founded in 2012.

Contents

Drawing upon the aims and principles of deliberative democracy theory, the website promotes considered debate in order to establish the "collective viewpoint" on political and social issues. [1]

Organisation

YourView is supported by the not-for-profit Ourview Foundation (ACN 154 763 970), established in 2011 by the Australian philosopher Tim Van Gelder in collaboration with the public intellectual Paul Monk. It is funded by voluntary donations. [1]

The site was launched publicly in May 2012 and was maintained and developed by a staff of volunteers based in Melbourne. The website is currently inactive, and the project on hold.

Content

YourView drew on ideas developed within the deliberative democracy movement, which promotes rational deliberation as a means of forming opinions and guiding policy decisions. [2]

Users initially voted for or against a proposition based on a current issue, and were subsequently invited to post comments to justify their adopted stance. Each debate was prefaced by an "explainer", which provided basic information about the issue being discussed including an outline of key arguments. [3]

As part of its objective to promote constructive and informed debate, YourView used an algorithm to assign each user a credibility score; the algorithm aimed to quantify a series of "epistemic virtues" that collectively determined the extent to which an individual user has contributed to the deliberative process. The raw "for-against" vote was weighted by user credibility scores to compute a "collective wisdom" metric, [3] thereby setting it apart from purely aggregative opinion polling. [4] Details about which factors influence the algorithm were not published, which reduced the model's transparency but aimed to prevent users from gaming the system. [5]

Related Research Articles

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">E-democracy</span> Use of information and communication technology in political and governance processes

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Tim van Gelder is the co-founder of Austhink Software, an Australian software development company, and the Managing Director of Austhink Consulting. He was born in Australia, and was educated at the University of Melbourne. He went on to receive his PhD from the University of Pittsburgh (1989). He has held academic positions at Indiana University and the Australian National University before returning to Melbourne as an Australian Research Council QEII Research Fellow. In 1998, he transitioned to part-time academic work allowing him to pursue private training and consulting, and in 2005 began working full-time at Austhink Software. In 2009 he transitioned to Managing Director of Austhink Consulting. He co-leads The SWARM Project at the University of Melbourne.

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">Filter bubble</span> Intellectual isolation through internet algorithms

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">Wiki survey</span> Survey method for crowdsourcing opinions

Wiki surveys or wikisurveys are a software-based survey method with similarity to how wikis evolve through crowdsourcing. In essence, they are surveys that allow participants to create the questions that are being asked. As participants engage in the survey they can either vote on a survey question or create a survey question. A single open-ended prompt written by the creator of the survey determines the topic the questions should be on. The first known implementation of a wiki survey was in 2010, and they have been used since then for a variety of purposes such as facilitating deliberative democracy, crowdsourcing opinions from experts and figuring out common beliefs on a given topic. A notable usage of wiki surveys is in Taiwan's government system, where citizens can participate in crowdsourced lawmaking through Polis wiki surveys.

References

  1. 1 2 "About YourView". YourView Australia. Retrieved 27 September 2012.
  2. Short, Michael (14 March 2012). "Full transcript: Tim van Gelder". The Age. Retrieved 27 September 2012.
  3. 1 2 Simons, Margaret (27 February 2012). "New Kid on the Block: YourView, a more considered taste taker". Crikey. Retrieved 27 September 2012.
  4. Short, Michael (14 March 2012). "The getting of wisdom". The Age. Retrieved 27 September 2012.
  5. Grötker, Ralf (31 May 2012). "Software bestraft Schwätzer" (in German). Heise Online . Retrieved 27 September 2012.