Search the web
Sign In
New User? Sign Up
thericecookershop
? Already a member? Sign in to Yahoo!

Yahoo! Groups Tips

Did you know...
Hear how Yahoo! Groups has changed the lives of others. Take me there.

Best of Y! Groups

   Check them out and nominate your group.
Having problems with message search? Fill out this form to ensure your group is one of the first to be migrated to the new message search system.

Messages

  Messages Help
Advanced
Pokai Are You?   Message List  
Reply | Forward Message #225 of 409 |
so you think you're seriously poor?

CLICK HERE >>> http://www.globalrichlist.com/ (change RM to USD first!)



Story location: http://www.wired.com/news/culture/0,1284,60380,00.html

02:00 AM Sep. 11, 2003 PT

You may think your salary is paltry, but compared with most of the
world's population, you're up there with Bill Gates.

A new website, the Global Rich List, starkly illustrates the worldwide
distribution of wealth.

You simply plug in your annual income, and the site tells you where you
rank among the world's richest people.

For example, individuals in the United States who make less than $9,300
are officially poor, according to the U.S. Census Bureau's definition
of poverty. But compared with the rest of the world, their income is in
the top 12 percent.

An annual household income of $42,200 -- the U.S. median in 2001 -- is
enough to land someone in the world's richest 1 percent, according to
the site.

"The idea is to really make people think about how rich they are
compared to the rest of the world," said Nicolas Roope, one of the
site's creators. "In the West, we tend to obsess about celebrities and
the super-rich. This is a really simple way to turn that on its head."

The site was created by Roope and several others from Poke, a London
interactive media company.
Roope, 32, Poke's creative director, said the site was launched to
coincide with this week's World Trade Organization summit in Cancun,
Mexico, where, increasingly, poor countries are pitting themselves
against rich. Key issues are cheap generic drugs for developing
nations, an end to richer nations' huge farm subsidies, reshuffling of
trade tariffs between rich and poor countries, and special economic
concessions for developing nations.

The site uses figures from the World Bank's Development Research Group,
which estimates that for the world's 6 billion people, average annual
income is $5,000.

Roope admitted the calculations don't take into account disparities in
the cost of living, taxation and other factors that contribute to
income. "It's simplified," he said. "The goal is to make people think."
Roope said he and his colleagues dreamed up the idea for the site last
year. They shopped it around to several charities but none was
interested without changing it significantly to fit their campaigns.
Reluctant to adapt the idea, Poke launched the site on its own. It soon
caught the eye of Care International, an international aid agency,
which asked to be associated with it. Roope said it turned out to be
"the perfect match."

Since going live last Monday, the site has attracted 120,000 unique
visitors. It has earned a few brief mentions in the press -- the London
Guardian, USA Today -- but most traffic has come from word of mouth,
weblogs and newsgroups.

With Poke's keen interest in viral marketing, the team was delighted
when the site topped the weblog popularity indices -- Daypop, Blogdex,
Popdex -- late last week.
The site has received lots of positive e-mail, but also some hate mail.
Most is from U.S. citizens who perceive an anti-American slant, Roope
said.
However, despite the attention, the site has raised relatively little
money for Care. So far, donations total about $1,700.

"It's a very small amount per visitor," said Roope. "I'm a bit
surprised we didn't get more."
Roope said there was initially a problem with the site's "donate"
button, which wasn't very prominent.
Denise Pritchard, spokeswoman for Care International, said the dearth
of donations could be partly attributed to people's wariness of
electronic transactions. Nonetheless, she said the site is proving to
be a very effective, low-cost way to promote the charity.

"It helps raise our profile," she said. "We're well-known in the field
in the countries we work in, but we're not as well-known in the West.
It's a crowded marketplace, and we send 91 percent of our funds
overseas, so there's not a lot to spend on marketing or promotion."

++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
DUNGPEOPLE:
http://dungpeople.sevcom.com

join my low-volume, moderated & irregular mailing list:
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/dungpeople/

and yeah, do read:
malaysiakini: http://www.malaysiakini.com
indymedia: http://www.indymedia.org/
Abolish ISA: http://www.suaram.org/isa/index.htm

Fri Sep 12, 2003 3:26 pm

dungboy@...
Send Email Send Email

Forward
Message #225 of 409 |
Expand Messages Author Sort by Date

so you think you're seriously poor? CLICK HERE >>> http://www.globalrichlist.com/ (change RM to USD first!) Story location:...
Joe Kidd
dungboy@...
Send Email
Sep 12, 2003
3:27 pm
Advanced

Copyright © 2009 Yahoo! Inc. All rights reserved.
Privacy Policy - Terms of Service - Guidelines - Help