Dropping knowledge is a global initiative to support the free and open
sharing of knowledge among the people of the world. Born out of the
democratizing power of the internet, dropping knowledge employs
advanced web-technology to empower the global public to ask the
questions that matter to them and seek new solutions through community
dialog.
A freely accessible Copyleft knowledge portal and dialog forum, dropping knowledge invites the global public to ask and answer questions, exchange viewpoints and ideas, and join the conversations around the most comprehensive database of social topics ever compiled.
The dropping knowledge platform empowers users to come together and inhabit a conceptual topography of 25,000 interconnected issues, setting up camps around the issues that interest them and creating a new space for ideas, information and people-powered solutions.
The Table of Free Voices on September 9, 2006 was the launch event for this new type of public service on the World Wide Web. The audiovisual recordings of the 11,200 answers provided by 112 social visionaries around the Berlin table serve as the seed-content. By the active participation of users and a new combination of knowledge and language technologies, the service will soon turn into an unprecedented source of social thought.
New global problems require a new global approach. Dropping knowledge not only increases awareness of existing solutions, but through an active dialog, generates new answers, new initiatives and new solutions.
When you question in order to understand, when you answer in order to share, when you act in order to trigger social change, you are dropping knowledge.
A freely accessible Copyleft knowledge portal and dialog forum, dropping knowledge invites the global public to ask and answer questions, exchange viewpoints and ideas, and join the conversations around the most comprehensive database of social topics ever compiled.
The dropping knowledge platform empowers users to come together and inhabit a conceptual topography of 25,000 interconnected issues, setting up camps around the issues that interest them and creating a new space for ideas, information and people-powered solutions.
The Table of Free Voices on September 9, 2006 was the launch event for this new type of public service on the World Wide Web. The audiovisual recordings of the 11,200 answers provided by 112 social visionaries around the Berlin table serve as the seed-content. By the active participation of users and a new combination of knowledge and language technologies, the service will soon turn into an unprecedented source of social thought.
New global problems require a new global approach. Dropping knowledge not only increases awareness of existing solutions, but through an active dialog, generates new answers, new initiatives and new solutions.
When you question in order to understand, when you answer in order to share, when you act in order to trigger social change, you are dropping knowledge.


































































