Money Tree & Social Media Savvy: How MIT Won the DARPA Red Balloon Challenge
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slice.mit.edu
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To mark the 40th anniversary of the Internet, the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, better known as DARPA, set up a contest challenging some 4,300 teams to locate 10 red weather balloons scattered across the U.S. on Dec. 5. DARPA, which wanted a better understanding of how information is disseminated through social networks, asked the teams to establish viral networks of spotters.
Late Saturday, DARPA announced an MIT team was the first to locate all the balloons and won the $40,000 first prize—in just eight hours and 56 minutes.
The MIT group, a small team at the MIT Media Laboratory Human Dynamics Group led by physicist Riley Crane, a post doc, won by enlisting the help of more than 4,000 spotters reporting via Facebook and Twitter. Their invitation to participate offered to share the money with accurate spotters and the charities of their choice—as well as people in their social networks.
“We're giving $2000 per balloon to the first person to send us the correct coordinates, but that's not all -- we're also giving $1000 to the person who invited them. Then we're giving $500 whoever invited the inviter, and $250 to whoever invited them, and so on...,” MIT noted on its Red Balloon Challenge Recruitment web page.
“This was a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to perform an experiment at a massive scale,” he told the New York Times.
Comments
nancyds
Wed, 02/17/2010 3:50pm
Hi Ralf,
Why don't you email the MIT team -- balloon@mit.edu-- to start. You can also contact DARPA's media person who handled the event: Johanna Jones, (571) 218-4512 or johanna.jones@darpa.mil.
good luck!
Nancy
Ralf Lippold
Sun, 02/14/2010 7:30am
This is just amazing - would love to bring the idea over to Dresden.
Especially as an experiment on how this kind of challenge can lead to increasing use of Facebook and Twitter around a country where these tools are not yet recognized in corporate world as it could be.
Whom Do I have to talk to in order to make it happen?
Looking forward to it and have fun with this year's challenge
Ralf
Kurt Morrow
Wed, 01/13/2010 9:34pm
It would be nice if they really paid out on there deal instead of just using the concept to get the balloons and then screw the people that allowed them to win . This will effect the MIT reputation well when the social network gets a hold of it.
David Sternlight
Tue, 12/22/2009 8:17pm
It would be interesting to see statistics about what level of the tree the actual spotters were.
peter
Sat, 12/19/2009 6:04am
it makes me truly proud! ... and yet: my beloved MIT community can‘t shake hydrocarbon and nuclear (funding) dependency - but it‘s terrific in locating red balloons ...