ZERO DOLLAR CRYPTOCARD https://zerodollar.app
The ZeroDollar Cryptocard itself is a mix from Global Unconditional Basic Income, Redistribution of Profits (not wealth), a Resource-Based Economy starter, and evolves into the system in waves…
It also forces the achievement of the Sustainable Development Goals by focusing on the long-term sustainable management of resources and the resulting waste (Circular Economy), and the fair and transparent resource distribution to 100% of the world's population, no matter what.
To get the ball rolling fast, because real people in the real world are hungry, we drop crypto and complicated workflows for now.
- Version 1 stable is a foodsharing app clone(reduced to map, spots, picture and short description, no profile), which private and corporate supporters are able to post food donations on a map.
- Every user gets 3 pickups in a 24 h period (which equals three ZeroDollar, but without the IT rat tail, just a limit to 3 each day)
- If the MVP runs well, we can start thinking about adding services, always sustainability and circularity in mind related to "how much of it in a defined period" (cloth? schoolbooks? furniture? carsharing rides? delivery jobs? public traffic rides? housing? cars? boats?)
There is a repository of a foodsharing.de clone https://github.com/worldpeaceenginelabs/foodsharing
- map
- spots (temp and permanent)
- picture/text upload
- chat between dropper and picker
- send location
- end-offer
This map shows where to pick up free food.
The orange spots are permanent voluntary pick up spots, having fresh food every day, saved from wasting (institutions, non-profits, community colleges, businesses, and even on bicycles)
This is a private person offering multiple things. You could either pick some or get all of it. Just pick up as much as you need, and dont worry. Tomorrow comes a another ton of elseway wasted food.
The actual food waste of one year could nutrition the whole world three times a year.
This is a german project which interacts with the app. There are bicycles with a box on the back locked in all areas in Cologne for instance. People are able to drop and pick groceries, they would the other way throw away. There is a bepictured instruction, how to clean the boxes, and people doing it on a weekly basis voluntarily.
Permanent spots (a locked bike is a permanent spot too) are called Fairteiler, which is dingslish (english influenced german) and means fair router.