Love this perspective! It’s wonderfull to see you consistently highlight initiatives like Common Space that prioritize impact over pure profit, and I really wonder how they plan to ensure true comunity access and data literacy in all target regions. The sheer potential of these AI-enabled maritime solutions for global awareness is also fascinating, and makes me think about the intricate algorithms and inference infrastructure needed for such scale.
There are indeed several projects and initiatives focused on societal impact. The challenge, as always, is finding sustainable funding models - it’s not for-profit, but someone still has to pay for it.
Carbon Mapper is a great example: it’s a mission that probably couldn’t have been funded 10–20 years ago. But the economics shifted - there’s been a strong push for decarbonisation and for companies to reduce their environmental footprint and meet climate goals. Within this new context, Carbon Mapper was able to secure funding and grants.
Unfortunately, these transitions take time - they depend on policy shifts and broader economic trends that make such missions viable.
In a time when objective truth has become increasingly blurred, the emphasis on transparency and evidence-based journalism could help spark the next wave of policies that make initiatives like Common Space possible.
Love this perspective! It’s wonderfull to see you consistently highlight initiatives like Common Space that prioritize impact over pure profit, and I really wonder how they plan to ensure true comunity access and data literacy in all target regions. The sheer potential of these AI-enabled maritime solutions for global awareness is also fascinating, and makes me think about the intricate algorithms and inference infrastructure needed for such scale.
Thanks so much for your comment!
There are indeed several projects and initiatives focused on societal impact. The challenge, as always, is finding sustainable funding models - it’s not for-profit, but someone still has to pay for it.
Carbon Mapper is a great example: it’s a mission that probably couldn’t have been funded 10–20 years ago. But the economics shifted - there’s been a strong push for decarbonisation and for companies to reduce their environmental footprint and meet climate goals. Within this new context, Carbon Mapper was able to secure funding and grants.
Unfortunately, these transitions take time - they depend on policy shifts and broader economic trends that make such missions viable.
In a time when objective truth has become increasingly blurred, the emphasis on transparency and evidence-based journalism could help spark the next wave of policies that make initiatives like Common Space possible.