osm-p2p is a decentralized peer-to-peer database for storing and editing OpenStreetMap nodes, ways, and relations. Learn about how it works and how to create your own OSM database and synchronize with other peers offline. Read more…
The Amazon is muggy, but Oakland is perfectly sunny. Celebrate the change of seasons and meet other technologists for good at our first Digital Drinks of 2016. Read more…
Inspired, and with ample time and notebooks to sketch and write, I jotted down some observations. These informed two posts that are now up on Digital Democracy's Medium page. Read more…
Digital Democracy is thrilled to be starting the new year with a new team member, Ruth Miller. Ruth is joining for the spring to us figure out how to scale our team and our impact. Read more…
I’m in Ecuador right now, I’ve just finished drone training with a group of community environmental monitors from a region of the Ecuadorian Amazon heavily affected by oil drilling over the past 4 decades. Today I am flying to the Waorani communities of Nemopare and Kiwaro to kick of a territory mapping project, helping the villages communicate their vision of their territory and their forest to the outside world through maps participatory video. Watch the video to learn more about our work in Ecuador. Read more…
Today we’re super excited to be one of 22 amazing projects to win support from the Knight Prototype Fund. We will use the funds to prototype new ways for anybody to make a map of the world around them using simple, open source tools that work in low-tech and low-connectivity environments. Read more…
We’re hiring. Are you a javascript developer with a passion for maps, the rainforest, human rights, or making a difference doing cool stuff? Join our dynamic team, building cutting edge tools to meet the needs of indigenous communities in Peru, Ecuador, Guyana and around the world who are on the front lines of the struggle to protect the world’s most beautiful places. Read more…
Dan Fredinburg, an adventurer, mountain climber and passionate social change-maker, was at Mount Everest basecamp with colleagues from Google on April 25, when a devastating 7.8 magnitude earthquake struck Nepal. Read more…
When your colleague has traveled 5,000 miles to South America to work with a remote indigenous community using their own custom-built drone to monitor deforestation, the last thing you want to receive in your inbox is an email titled “Drone Crash!” That’s the problem I get for working with someone with a classically British sense of humor. Read more…
The Dd team just finished a five-day event in the Peruvian Rainforest city of Tarapoto. Hack the Rainforest was an experience unlike any other - an unprecedented gathering of indigenous environmental monitors, technologists and civil society organizations to address urgent environmental problems threatening indigenous communities throughout the Amazon region. Read more…