Crowdsourcing Stocks List

Related ETFs - A few ETFs which own one or more of the above listed Crowdsourcing stocks.

Crowdsourcing Stocks Recent News

Date Stock Title
May 15 DUOL 1 No-Brainer Artificial Intelligence (AI) Stock to Buy With $200 and Hold for the Long Run
May 14 DADA Dada Nexus Q1 2024 Earnings Preview
May 14 DUOL Duolingo, Inc. (DUOL) Is a Trending Stock: Facts to Know Before Betting on It
May 13 DUOL Duolingo & Roblox: Did Investors Get It Right?
May 13 DUOL 5 Reasons To Buy Duolingo: This Analyst Sees 46.5% Upside Despite GenAI Competition
May 12 DUOL 20 States with the Highest High School Dropout Rates in the US
May 12 DUOL Is Duolingo a Buy on the Dip?
May 10 DUOL Demystifying Duolingo: Insights From 10 Analyst Reviews
May 10 DUOL Duolingo: Great Buying Opportunity After Post-Earnings Selloff
May 10 DUOL Language learning app Duolingo is taking on music and math lessons
May 10 DUOL Duolingo Inc (DUOL) Surpasses Q1 Revenue and Profit Expectations, Raises Full-Year Guidance
May 10 DUOL Stock Market Moves Toward Highs; Arista, Toast, Palantir Key Earnings Movers: Weekly Review
May 10 DADA Dada to Announce Unaudited First Quarter 2024 Financial Results on May 15, 2024
May 10 DUOL Duolingo: The Post-Earnings Crash Makes This Stock More Appealing
May 10 DUOL Duolingo First Quarter 2024 Earnings: EPS Beats Expectations
May 9 DUOL Robinhood CEO, Arm Holdings earnings: Market Domination
May 9 DUOL Dow Adds To Winning Streak; Nasdaq and S&P 500 Start New Trend
May 9 DUOL Duolingo stock sinking on weak Q1 user growth
May 9 DUOL Duolingo to Bet on Generative AI Subscription Plan
May 9 DUOL Why Duolingo Stock Crashed Despite Street-Stumping Results
Crowdsourcing

Crowdsourcing is a sourcing model in which individuals or organizations obtain goods or services, including ideas, voting, micro-tasks and finances, from a large, relatively open and often rapidly evolving group of participants. As of 2021, crowdsourcing typically involves using the internet to attract and divide work between participants to achieve a cumulative result. The word "crowdsourcing" itself - a portmanteau of "crowd" and "outsourcing" - was allegedly coined in 2005.
Crowdsourcing is not necessarily an "online" activity; it existed before Internet access became a household commodity.Major differences distinguish crowdsourcing from outsourcing. Crowdsourcing comes from a less-specific, more public group, whereas outsourcing is commissioned from a specific, named group, and includes a mix of bottom-up and top-down processes. Advantages of using crowdsourcing may include improved costs, speed, quality, flexibility, scalability, or diversity.Some forms of crowdsourcing, such as in "idea competitions" or "innovation contests" provide ways for organizations to learn beyond the "base of minds" provided by their employees (e.g. LEGO Ideas). Tedious "microtasks" performed in parallel by large, paid crowds (e.g. Amazon Mechanical Turk) are another form of crowdsourcing. Not-for-profit organizations have used crowdsourcing to develop common goods (e.g. Wikipedia). The effect of user communication and the platform presentation should be taken into account when evaluating the performance of ideas in crowdsourcing contexts.Crowdsourcing can play a role in democratization.

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