If you know an open source software developer whose work is helping
non-profit activists succeed, please forward on this opportunity for
the $10,000 Pizzigati Prize. The Open Data Kit team received this
prize a few years back and the support and attention we received were
fantastic!


---------- Forwarded message ----------
September 16, 2012 - Nominations have now opened for the seventh
annual Antonio Pizzigati Prize for Software in the Public Interest,
the nation's highest honor for software developers working with
nonprofits to help advance innovative social change.

Tides is now accepting nominations for this year's $10,000 prize
through December 1st. The 2013 winner will be announced in April at
the Nonprofit Technology Network annual conference in Minneapolis.

The Pizzigati Prize honors talented and creative individuals who
develop open source software products that demonstrate impressive
value to the nonprofit sector. Tides welcomes nominations from both
developers and the nonprofits who work with them.

The most recent Pizzigati Prize winner, Nathan Freitas, leads the
Guardian Project, a team of software developers working on new mobile
technology programs that can help activists "coordinate, protest, and
campaign" more efficiently and effectively, no matter where they may
be on the planet. His flagship "Secure Smart Cam" app enables human
rights defenders to safely capture and distribute human rights digital
media.

The 2011 Pizzigati Prize winner, Ken Banks, has created software that
turns even the simplest mobile phones into grassroots organizing tools
for everything from mobilizing young voters to thwarting thieving
commodity traders.

"Software developers like these are making an enormous difference,"
notes Tides CEO Melissa Bradley. "The Pizzigati Prize aims to salute
their contribution - and encourage programmers to engage their talents
in the ongoing struggle for social change."

The Pizzigati Prize also honors the brief life of Tony Pizzigati, an
early advocate of open source computing. Born in 1971, Tony spent his
college years at MIT, where he worked at the world-famous MIT Media
Lab. Tony, an early champion of open-source computing, died in 1995,
in an auto accident on his way to work in Silicon Valley.

Full details on the Tides Pizzigati Prize, the largest annual award in
public interest computing, appear online at www.pizzigatiprize.org.
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