User:Hatirobles/sandbox

Hatikvah Robles

= Change.org = Change.org is a for profit petition website based in San-Francisco, which has over 400 million worldwide users and offers the public the ability to promote the petitions they care about to potential signers. Including 196 countries which are “creating change” in their communities. Designed to raise awareness within communities to influence “Decision-makers '' at the highest levels of government and business are engaging with their constituents and consumers”. ( change.org/about ). Leading organizations are meant to advance their causes and mobilize new supporters. In terms of media the organization's mission is to source powerful stories and cover campaigns hundreds of times a day.

Until 2016, Change.org hosted sponsored campaigns, and corporations including Virgin America, and organizations such as the Humane Society, paid the site to promote their petitions. Change.org's mission is to "empower people everywhere to create the change they want to see." Most trending topics on the Change.org platform include economic and criminal justice, human rights, education, environmental protection, animals rights, health, and sustainable food.

= History = Change.org launched in 2007 by Ben Rattray, with the combined efforts of Mark Dimas, Darren Haas, and Adam Cheyer. At the start of 2012, the site had 100 employees with offices on four continents. By the end of 2012, Rattray stated "he plans to have offices in 20 countries and to operate in more languages, including Arabic and Chinese." In 2013, the company announced a $15 million round of investment led by Omidyar Network and said it has 170 staff members in 18 countries. The company began as a nonprofit that connected charities to donors, but has transitioned into a for-profit company that makes money by selling advertised petitions on its website, Change.org.

In 2011, the company stated it was the subject of a distributed denial-of-service attack by "Chinese hackers" and that the alleged attack was related to its petition to the Chinese government to release artist Ai Weiwei. ​​A Denial-of-Service attack is an attack meant to shut down a network, making it inaccessible to its intended users. In 2011, there was a proposal to merge the Spanish-speaking counterpart website Actuable into Change.org; the merger occurred in 2012 when the voluntary union of Actuable users into the Change.org platform was approved.

A display of Change.org and its impact occurred in 2012, Arizona State University decided to block access to the website in response to a petition created by student Eric Haywood protesting "rising tuition costs at the school". University officials claimed that "Change.org is a spam site" and the blocking was conducted "to protect the use of our limited and valuable network resources for legitimate academic, research, and administrative uses".

It was reported on April 5, 2012, that Change.org hit 10 million members, and was the fastest-growing social action platform. At that time, they were receiving 500 new petitions per day. On May 13, 2012, The Guardian, BBC News, and other sources reported that Change.org would launch a UK-specific platform for petitions, placing Change.org in competition with 38 Degrees, a British not-for-profit political-activism organization.

In 2013, Fast Company magazine reported that Change.org would soon begin featuring petition recipients, saying, "For the first time, companies will be able to post a public response to any given petition (currently, they can only respond to the person who started the campaign). They will also be able to create their Decision Maker page, which will show all petitions against them, the number of signatures gathered, and their statuses.”

= Notable Petitions =

Brazil
On May 16, 2016, President Dilma’s impeachment request received 2,212,208 signatures.

Created by Caio Coppolla, March 15, 2021, Supreme Federal Court Minister Alexandre de Moraes’s impeachment request received more than 2.099.261 signatures, in just one day

On October 13th, 2017, Ana Clara Leite was sexually harassed twice in taxis after drivers accessed her information using a mobile phone app called Easy Taxi. She won her petition asking Easy Taxi App to introduce safety measures, with the backing of more than 27,000 Brazilians.

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-brazil-tech-transportation/female-ride-hailing-apps-grow-in-brazil-on-safety-concerns-idUSKBN1CI1UF

United States

In December 2011, a fourth-grade class in Brookline, Massachusetts, launched the "Lorax Petition Project" through Change.org requesting Universal Studios to include more of an environmental message on its website and trailer for its upcoming film, The Lorax, a classic Dr. Seuss children's story. The petitioners felt that the website and trailer lacked an important message from the book, "to help the environment". The petition collected over 57,000 signatures, and on January 26, 2012, the studio updated the website "with the environmental message the kids had dictated".

On the morning of February 2, 2012, Stef Gray, a 23-year-old graduate in New York, held a news conference at the Washington offices of Sallie Mae where she presented the results of her Change.org, Sallie Mae, the "nation's largest private student-loan provider" petition, which had received about 77,000 signers. That afternoon the company changed its forbearance fee policy.

In November 2013, Aaron Thompson from Tuscaloosa, Alabama started a petition, directed at Seth MacFarlane to bring back Brian Griffin on the TV series Family Guy, after he was briefly killed off in the Season 12 episode "Life of Brian". Thompson's petition gained 30,000 signatures within 36 hours. The character was brought back to the show a few episodes later. However, this was not a result of the petition, as the episodes were conceived months prior.

In September 2014, Karol Wilcox of Hayti, Missouri started a petition against the planned execution of Beau, a two-and-a-half-year-old dog in Dyersburg, Tennessee, for allegedly killing a duck on his owner's property. By November, this petition had gained over 540,000 signatures. The petition worked and the dog was spared.

After the 2016 United States presidential election, in which Donald Trump was declared President-elect of the United States, there were mass protests. As part of these protests, one California man started a change.org petition on November 10, 2016, which called for electors in states that Trump won to become faithless electors and cast their vote for Hillary Clinton instead at state Electoral College meetings. The petition acquired over 4 million signatures by November 14, 2016, only 4 days after it started. By November 23, 2016, it had gotten 4.5 million signatures. The petition ultimately failed as, on December 19, 2016, Trump officially gained the presidency with 304 electors. The petition closed with 4.9 million signatures, the highest in change.org history, until March 5, 2019, when it was surpassed by a petition opposing Article 13 of the proposed Directive on Copyright in the Digital Single Market. That petition was then toppled on May 30, 2020, by a petition made to get justice for George Floyd, an unarmed, African-American man who was murdered by police. As of early July 2020, the petition had nearly 19 million signatures, making it the most signed petition in the history of change.org.

In summer 2017, a petition on change.org called for /r/incels (incel named after an abbreviation for "involuntary celibate") to be banned for inciting violence against women.

On November 3, 2017, following sexual assault claims made against actor Kevin Spacey, Netflix fired the actor from and stalled the production of, the sixth and final season of the television series in which Spacey had starred on the network, House of Cards. Following Spacey's dismissal, a petition was created on November 2, 2017, calling for Spacey to be replaced by actor Kevin James as a post-plastic surgery Frank Underwood began gaining a rapid number of supporters; this petition has gained media notability since its inception, gaining 50,000 supporters within eight days.

In wake of the Logan Paul suicide video controversy, the user "... - .- -.-- .- .-.. .. ...- ." ("stay alive" in Morse code) created a petition entitled “Delete Logan Paul’s YouTube Channel", having received more than 520,000 signatures as of January 15, 2018. While numerous other petitions have been created for the same purpose, none have received as much attention.

On July 14, 2019, an online petition titled "The Immediate Halt to the Construction of the TMT Telescope" was posted on Change.org in protest against the Thirty Meter Telescope. The online petition has currently gathered over 278,057 signatures worldwide.

On May 5th. 2020, The death of George Floyd, a 46-year-old Black man, drew widespread outrage in May 2020 after a video circulated online showing Officer Derek Chauvin holding his knee on Mr. Floyd’s neck on a Minneapolis street corner as he gasped for breath.Mr. Floyd’s death spurred nationwide protests against police brutality and a reckoning over everything from public monuments to sports team names. A change.org campaign began with the intention to “ reach the attention of Mayor Jacob Frey and DA Mike Freeman to beg to have the officers involved in this disgusting situation fired and for charges to be filed immediately.”, according to the campaign leader. With the media attention as well as 19,699,505 supporters in the petition Mr. Chauvin and the three other officers involved in Mr. Floyd’s death — Thomas Lane, Tou Thao and J. Alexander Kueng — were fired and charged with a variety of crimes.On April 20, Mr. Chauvin, 45, was found guilty of second-degree murder, third-degree murder and second-degree manslaughter. Mr. Lane, Mr. Thao and Mr. Kueng, who had been scheduled to face a joint trial starting in August, will now be tried in March.

( https://www.nytimes.com/article/george-floyd.html )

U.S. Congress reauthorizes the Zadroga Act. John Feal, a 9/11 first responder, was integral in passing the Zadroga Act in 2010, which covers health expenses and compensates other first responders who are suffering debilitating illnesses and injuries as a result of their service. When Congress stalled on reauthorizing the bill, he started a petition to help push it through that was signed by nearly 187,000 people.

United Kingdom[edit]
On March 10, 2015, political blogger Guido Fawkes, whose real name is Paul Staines, started a petition to reinstate Jeremy Clarkson, BBC co-host of TV series Top Gear. This followed the BBC's decision to suspend him over a "fracas" involving a producer on the show.[ citation needed] The petition gained over 500,000 signatures within 24 hours, making it the fastest-growing petition to date for the site while having the servers at Change.org in the UK regularly become unresponsive due to the high demand. It had gained over 1,000,000 signatures by March 20, 2015, and it was delivered to the BBC. On March 25, 2015, the BBC released an official statement confirming that, as a result of the actions which led to his suspension, they would not be renewing his contract with the show.

A petition was started in 2020, to get fundraiser Tom Moore knighted, as of April 30, 1 million people had signed. He was knighted on 20 May that year.

A petition was started in 2020, to get Dominic Cummings sacked after it emerged he traveled from London to his parents' home in Durham with coronavirus symptoms during the COVID-19 lockdown, as of May 30, 2020, this had 1 million signatures.

Prisoners are freed with the help of UK citizens. Karl Andree was arrested in Saudi Arabia and sentenced to 378 lashes for having homemade wine in the boot of his car. His started a petition to free Karl, which was signed more than 250,00 times before this release.More than 777,000 people signed Iman Ghavami’s victorious petition calling for the release of his sister Ghoncheh. She was jailed in Iran for attending a men’s volleyball match.

On March 31st, 2015, Iranian prisoners were freed with the help of United Kingdom Citizens. Ghoncheh, a law student in the University of London and a British Iranian dual citizen, was in Iran teaching literacy to street children for charity as well as to visit family. She was arrested in JUne 2014 for attending the World League Volleyball matches, after the Iranian government was informed of the matter by the International Federation of Volleyball (FIVB). Iman Ghavami, the prisoner's brother, created a change.org campaign in petition to the Government of Iran and the Government of the United Kingdom. He gained 747,476 supporters after public outrage in the United Kingdom began in support of freeing Ghoncheh.

Canada[edit]

In August 2014, Erica Perry from Vancouver, BC, started a petition asking Centerplate, a large food and beverage corporation serving entertainment venues in North America and the UK, to fire its then-CEO Desmond "Des" Hague after the public release of security camera footage allegedly showing Hague abusing a young Doberman Pinscher in an elevator. In response to Centerplate not taking action after the incident other than releasing a statement of apology from Hague, and an agreement by Hague to commit to performing certain charitable acts, the petition called for Centerplate to fire Hague. On September 2, 2014, after the petition had received over 190,000 signatures, Hague resigned from his position as CEO of Centerplate.

On April 29, 2018, two nights after the release of Avengers: Infinity War, Ryan Leger from Bolton, Ontario started a petition for Marvel Studios to extend Mark Ruffalo's contract for him to appear in an Incredible Hulk 2 and for Universal Pictures to let Disney have the distribution rights to any potential post-Avengers: Endgame Hulk films and Disney, in return, give Universal, for each, a marquee credit (including placement of the studio's opening logo) and 8-9% of the profits as they have for Paramount Pictures with The Avengers and Iron Man 3.

Two 13-year-old girls won a campaign to make the issue of consent a part of their Ontario school district’s health program. They were backed by nearly 50,000 Canadians.
On February 7th, 2015, two 13-year-old girls made consent part of Canada’s sex-ed program after they stated “In Canada 1 in 4 women will experience at least one incident of sexual assult in thier life. Half of these assaults will be against women under 16 years of age.” The goal of the campaign was to include the conversation of consent into the ciriculum of sex education. By the end of the campaign they had 40,484 supporters and met with Premier Kathleen Wynne and Minister Liz Scandals, which led to the topic of consent being taught in Canada.

France[edit]
In February 2016, 50 petitions have exceeded 100,000 signatories. A petition against the "Loi El Khomri", a labor law project by the French Labor Minister Myriam El Khomri has over 1 million signatures.

Mother helps enact anti-bullying measures in France
=== After her daughter, Marion, committed suicide, Nora Fraisse, started a petition to enact measures that prevent school harassment. Nearly 80,000 people signed the petition and now the Minister of Education is developing provisions to stop such harassment. === On October 24th, 2015, Marion, a victim of harassment at her school that led to her ending her life, was the inspiration of a campaign started to “train in the prevention and management of school violence and bullying with teaching and educational teams will be reformed and improved.”As well as victim assistance. The campaign raised public interest and the campaign leader, the mother of Marion, met with the Ministry of National Education and had an interview with the Minister Najat Vallaud Belkacem, of National Education. This campaign had 79,432 supporters.

Philippines[edit]
The petition to have death row convict Mary Jane Veloso released was the fastest ever growing petition from the Philippines with over 250,000 signatories from over 125 countries.

Filipinos all over the world stop tax on balikbayan boxes

A balikbayan box is a box that contains items sent by Filipinos living overseas. When customs tried to impose tighter rules and additional taxes on the boxes, Filipinos acted quickly. In a breakout, rapid response victory, more than 87,000 Filipino signed the petition that overturned those new customs rules.

Australia[edit]
In 2018 an anonymous creator of a Facebook community built on hatred for people riding bikes started a Change.org anti-cycling petition that has grown in a short time to reach over 100,000 signatures. Allegedly, there is evidence many of the names on the petition are fake.

In 2019, a petition was directed towards the Australian government to remove Senator Fraser Anning from the Australian Federal Parliament after his comments on the terrorist attack in Christchurch, New Zealand. Anning blamed immigration laws, the victims, and heightening fears of Muslims for the attack. The petition (as of 10:11 AM UTC on March 24, 2019) has 1,418,105 signatures, making it one of the second most signed petitions on Change.org, and the highest concerning Australian affairs.

Teen guarantees domestic violence prevention is covered in Australian curriculum

=== A fourteen-year-old girl started a petition just weeks after her mum’s suicide calling for domestic violence prevention to be included in the national curriculum. After more than 100,000 signatures it won. === On July 3th, 2015, a 14-year-old girl guaranteed domestic violence prevention is covered in the Australian curriculum. The campaign was started as a campaign to raise awareness to victims that were not aware they were victims of domestic violence. After the campaign the Minister Prue Goward announced that the school districts will introduce domestic violence education into schools. The campaign had 101,747 supporters.

Mexico[edit]
After two earthquakes hit Central Mexico on September 7 and September 19, 2017, there were different petitions to force the "Instituto Nacional Electoral" (National Electoral Institute), the Mexican Senate, and President Enrique Peña Nieto to donate most or all of the money destined for the upcoming 2018 general elections be redirected to victims of the natural disaster in Mexico City and neighboring states of Morelos, Chiapas, Oaxaca, and Puebla. All petitions together sum the number of more than 3 million signatures.

= Business Model = Change.org makes revenue through a subscription membership model and people promoting petitions on the site. They also make a majority of their money by running advertised campaigns on their website.

Change.org members contribute monthly to sustain the technology and the teams of campaigners who act as consultants for petition starters. The majority of the company's revenue is advertising - individuals and organizations who start or sign petitions then chip in to promote those petitions to other site visitors.

In its lifetime the corporation has raised $50 million to fuel its growth from mission-aligned investors in business, technology, and the media. In 2017 an investment round driven by Reid Hoffman helped drive the shift to the current business model.

The website previously made revenue by running advertisements called sponsored campaigns for advocacy organizations such as Amnesty International and list-building services to partner organizations. In 2013 the website started "crowd-promoted petitions" that allowed a signatory (a party that has signed an agreement, especially a country that has signed a treaty.) to promote the petition by paying $5 to $1000 at the final stage of petition signing.

On June 30, 2021, workers for Change.org announced that a majority of staff in the US and Canada had signed union authorization cards in favor of being represented for collective bargaining by CODE-CWA and that the company had voluntarily recognized CODE-CWA as the representative of the workers. As of June 30, 2021, Change.org is the largest tech company to voluntarily recognize its staff's labor union. Showing it’s interest in supporting their workers and living by the company's values.

Change.org is a for-profit, venture-backed company that hosts activist petitions written by members of the public, gathers email addresses from signees, and encourages people to circulate the petitions heavily on social media. While for-profit, Change.org is a public benefit company with B Corp status. It has raised $72 million from backers including LinkedIn founder Reid Hoffman. ( https://www.businessinsider.com/change-org-george-floyd-donations-petition-keeps-money-2020-6 )

Donations through the platform do not go to the campaign makers, according to the change.org spokesperson, "The money raised from petitions goes toward helping the campaign win and helping us build and maintain our technology platform, making it possible for us to provide people with the tools they need to win the change they want to see.”

= Criticism: =

Allegation of fake signatures
In 2018, Anne Savage, the CEO of Bicycle Queensland, claimed that a massive Australian–based anti-cycling petition on Change.org was full of false names. She said Bicycle Queensland had received information that many of the names were created by “bots ''. A spokesperson for Change.org denied that the signatures were fake, saying that the organization's engineering team had double-checked the petition and confirmed they had not detected any unusual activity.

Visibility of personal information
Under certain conditions, signatures and other private information including email addresses can be found by search engines. Change.org implements a system for signature hiding, which works only if the user has an account on Change.org. However, the platform has been criticized for not providing enough information on who has signed a petition; for instance a means of verifying that a petition protesting a politician has been signed by his or her constituents or that the signatures are genuine at all. The corporation's own privacy and safety regulations have sparked controversy against them.

Nonprofit status and .org versus .com
Change.org is a Delaware General Corporation Law organized benefit corporation and certified B corporation. This has resulted in debate and criticism of its use of the .org domain suffix rather than the commercial .com. The site has been accused of fooling its users and hiding the fact that it is "a for-profit entity that has an economic incentive to get people to sign petitions".

Change.org is being deliberately deceitful through the use of the change.org name. I'd suspect that the average change.org user does not know that Change.org is a for-profit corporation, and that the corporation plans on using the contact information being provided to them to earn revenue.

— Clay Johnson

Change.org spokesperson Charlotte Hill countered this criticism in a September 2013 article in Wired, saying, "We are a mission-driven social enterprise, and while we bring in revenue, we reinvest 100% of that revenue back into our mission of empowering ordinary people. It's not just that we're not yet making a profit – it's that we are decidedly not-for-profit.” Some motivation for Change.org's legal status was given by its founder Ben Rattray:

Rattray originally planned to build a nonprofit, but that changed when he started talking to funders. "People kept telling me: 'We love your vision, but you don't necessarily need to be a nonprofit,'" he remembers. "They said that businesses have a couple of advantages: speed and scale.”

Advertising policy
In 2012, the site dropped most of the restrictions it previously placed on paid content. Internal documents began referring to "clients" and "partners" as "advertisers". Stating that "only advertisers strictly identified as 'hate groups' are to be banned.” As a result, Change.org was accused of encouraging astroturfing (Astroturfing is the practice of masking the sponsors of a message or organization to make it appear as though it originates from and is supported by grassroots participants.) and abandoning the progressive user base from which it initially gained traction. Additional controversy arose when the employee who initially leaked the documents was fired. Of the users who lost interest in the site after this change, a number of them expressed difficulty in being removed from Change.org mailing lists.

Selling of personal data
Change.org has also been accused of selling the personal data provided by the users to third-party companies that hire its services. This is a common thing among corporations and should be explained to the general public in a better manner.

(what kind of personal data is being collected and sold). Most of the time its just the search history and stuff of that nature.

Use for trending topics
Topics for Change.org petitions have grown to include a large variety of topics with the Academy Awards and removing milk from certain types of coffee. The authors of these petitions have been criticized for focusing on “first world problems”. The further debate over the content of petitions came in November 2014 when Martin Daubney called some of them "bizarre" and stated that the site was being used to promote censorship. In response, the Change.org communication director John Coventry defended the wide range of petitions, saying that "people make an informed choice in what they want to support.” The following week saw criticism alleging that petitions about the media receive more attention than petitions about "saving 'actual' lives.

Donations
Change.org solicits signers to also donate money upon signing the petition. Although the donation is optional, it can be misleading to users who may believe the donations are used to fund petition organizers or to advance that particular petition. The donations are "unrestricted" according to its FAQ. As further reported, "Change.org keeps the money and uses it to 'circulate' petitions more widely and pay for its operating costs."

Over 140 former employees of Change.org published an open letter noting "these contributions serve to market the petition and Change.org itself via billboards and digital ads" and, following the murder of George Floyd and consequent Black Lives Matter uprisings in June 2020, that "these actions constitute Change.org profiting from the death of Black people.”