首页
外语
计算机
考研
公务员
职业资格
财经
工程
司法
医学
专升本
自考
实用职业技能
登录
外语
Tycoons gathering this weekend at Google’s Silicon Valley headquarters will be giving money away, not trying to make more. Larry
Tycoons gathering this weekend at Google’s Silicon Valley headquarters will be giving money away, not trying to make more. Larry
admin
2017-03-15
40
问题
Tycoons gathering this weekend at Google’s Silicon Valley headquarters will be giving money away, not trying to make more. Larry Page, one of the search firm’s founders and, with a personal fortune estimated at over $14 billion, one of the world’s richest 33-year-olds, is holding a fundraiser for one of his favourite charitable causes, the X Prize Foundation. The foundation is a force behind one of the most intriguing trends in philanthropy: promoting change by offering prizes.
It has worked before. The chronometer was invented to win an 18th-century British government prize. Charles Lindbergh flew the Atlantic to win $25,000 offered by Raymond Orteig, a hotelier. That inspired Peter Diamandis, the X Prize’s creator, to offer $10 million for the first private space flight, won in 2004 by SpaceShipOne.
In October the foundation launched its second prize, for genomics: $10 million to the first inventor able to sequence 100 human genomes in ten days. In the same month Mo Ibrahim, a Sudanese mobile-phone entrepreneur, endowed an annual prize of $5 million plus $200,000 a year for life for former African leaders reckoned to have governed well. Last month a British entrepreneur, Sir Richard Branson, launched the Virgin Earth Challenge, offering $25 million to the inventor of a commercially and environmentally viable method of removing greenhouse gases from the atmosphere.
The Rockefeller Foundation has recently formed a partnership with InnoCentive, an entrepreneurial website, to offer financial rewards to people who solve specific social challenges posted on the site. The $1.5 billion Advance Market Commitments, recently put up by a group of rich states and the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation to stimulate the production of vaccines, is a prize of sorts.
And if this weekend’s event goes well, the X Prize Foundation plans to add to the boom by announcing a further ten prizes worth $200 million over the next five years, in areas ranging from space and medicine (again) to education, energy and entrepreneurship. This spring, a further X Prize for the creator of a super-efficient car is likely.
Matthew Leerberg of Duke University, points out that prizes are more commonly based on recognition of past achievement (such as the Nobel awards), or promote awareness of causes favoured by the donor. "Incentivising" prizes, by contrast, stimulate achievement of specific goals. That has big attractions for businesslike philanthropists such as Mr. Page. This new generation of donors believes that traditional philanthropy is hugely inefficient. On past experience, Dr. Diamandis reckons that a prize means "ten to 40 times the amount of money gets spent". Transatlantic fliers spent a combined $400,000 to win $25,000 from Mr. Orteig; the 26 teams competing for the $10 million spaceflight prize spent $100 million.
Dr. Diamandis says Mr. Page’s fundraising efforts offer even greater leverage: "Larry says that if he were to give to a university, he’d get about 50 cents on the dollar of value, maybe $2 if there are matching funds. But he gets ten-times leverage by launching a prize, and 100-times leverage by supporting a prize-giving organisation." Prizes may also stimulate those whom old-style grant-making processes fail to reach, such as people outside mainstream research institutions and corporate life.
It can go wrong: prizes, such as that for honest government in Africa, may be too small, given other incentives. The criteria need to be clear and sensible—easier in science than in woollier areas such as social policy. The efficiency of a car engine can be defined in terms of a miles-per-gallon equivalent. But, as the X Prize Foundation may soon discover, coming up with a clear, testable and useful challenge in, say, education is tricky.
Developing rules for such tricky prizes is one reason why the foundation needs $50 million for its running costs, which will support a staff of 40 "prize experts" who will identify suitable prizes, write the rules and try to generate public excitement.
Even clear rules and a big prize may not deliver the desired result. From 1994 to 1999 the Rockefeller Foundation offered a $1 million prize for a cheap, reliable test for sexually transmitted diseases. The offer expired without being claimed. Sir Richard describes the chances of the Virgin Earth Challenge being won as "less likely than likely". And yet, he says, if the prize is won, "It will be the happiest day of my life, the best cheque I’ve ever written."
The passage raised such a question as______.
选项
A、how to assess a social research breakthrough as well as a scientific one
B、whether a boom in philanthropic prize-giving will change the world
C、how to work out the amount of money as a prize
D、which area should receive the biggest charitable money
答案
B
解析
转载请注明原文地址:https://kaotiyun.com/show/ZjSO777K
本试题收录于:
NAETI高级口译笔试题库外语翻译证书(NAETI)分类
0
NAETI高级口译笔试
外语翻译证书(NAETI)
相关试题推荐
Allinall,itisnowbeyonddoubtthatinsizeandscopetherapidglobalspreadofthehabittowearjeans,howeveritmaybe
Sincethedawnofcivilization,peoplehavebeencuriousabouttheageofEarth.Inaddition,wehavenotbeensatisfiedinbein
Everyautumn,retailershirelargenumbersofseasonalworkerstohandletherushofholidaybusiness.Then,afterthenewyear
Theeraofdividedgovernmentbegins,inauspiciously.Willthepresidentbeabletoseethewoodforthesubpoenas?Isuspectth
中国经济高速发展,需要大量的矿产品及相关的能源与原材料加工制品。每年消耗的矿石量达60多亿吨,位居世界前列。中国政府为实现经济的可持续发展,在矿产资源勘查、开发领域制定了一系列的法律、法规和政策,形成了既适合中国国情又基本与国际接轨的矿产资源勘查
随着中国实现总量控制的目标所面临的挑战日益严峻,以部门为基础分配减排责任的可能性越来越大。另外,根据最新修订的《空气清洁条例》,排放许可最终被赋予了法律地位,并在指定和执行减排义务中起指导性作用。//根据这两项最新的政策进展,美国环保协会已经和国家环保总局
KansasandIowa,richinwindresources,canprovidemoreelectricitythanotherstates.
Usingapublictelephonemaywellbeoneof【C1】______oflife,demandingpatience,determinationand【C2】______,togetheronoccas
ManytreesintheBrackhamareawerebroughtdownintheterriblestormsthatMarch.Thetownitselflosttwogreatlimetreesf
随机试题
在肩关节横断层面上,呈C形从前、后和外侧包绕肩关节的肌
银行卖出外币现钞与卖出外汇现汇价格相同。()
IwasonlyeightyearsoldwhentheSecondWorldWarended,butIcanstillremembersomethingaboutthevictorycelebrationsin
男性,30岁,搬家公司工人,工作时不慎被家具砸伤右前臂,18小时后急诊来院,诉右前臂疼痛剧烈,右手主动活动障碍。查体见右前臂明显肿胀、压痛。该患者确诊为筋膜间隙综合征,下列体征对于早期诊断非常重要的有
牙周基础治疗后,牙龈肥大增生仍未消退,适用的手术治疗方法为
甲因农业生产而急需用钱,但又求借无门。某乙趁机表示愿借给甲3000元,但半年后须加倍偿还,否则以甲的两头耕牛代偿。甲表示同意。甲乙之问的行为()。
了解求助者各方面情况的会谈是()会谈。
生态住宅:是指运用生态学原理和遵循生态平衡及可持续发展的原则,设计、组织建筑内外空间中的各种物质因素,使物质、能源在建筑系统内有秩序地循环转换,从而获得一种高效、低耗、无污染、生态平衡的建筑环境。根据上述定义,下列不属于生态住宅的是()。
"You"inthepassagewanttogototheschool."You"liketheschoolverymuch.
Accordingtotheinterviewer,whatattitudedomostyoungpeopleholdtowardskeepinghealthy?
最新回复
(
0
)