Glossary
WikiDeal:ReferenceImagination ThΓ©o Bondolfi, formalized with AI assistance.Learn more · Contribute
This glossary defines the official terminology of the WikiDeal model. Where previous terms have been superseded, the old terms are noted and marked as deprecated. These are the definitive terms β all documents, contracts, and communications should use these terms exclusively.
- Support
- The act of contributing financially to WikiDeal Prototype 1. Replaces deprecated terms "Investment," "Contribution," " CiblΓ©e," and " Libre." A funder makes a Donation to Ynternet.org Foundation and receives memberships on the bonding curve.
- Gift
- Priority 1 allocation. The portion of a funder's membership return that is directed to community-benefit purposes: subsidised memberships for beneficiaries, User Group development funds, or the WikiDeal common pool. Previously called "" or "Community Project Reward" β those terms are deprecated.
- Cash Reward
- Priority 2 allocation. The portion of a funder's membership return that flows back to the funder personally. Distributed 50% in solidarity (pro-rata to all Cash Reward holders on each membership sold) and 50% in FIFO order. Previously called "Γ2 ," "Personal Project Reward," or "" β all deprecated.
- Cash Credits (no guarantee*) π°
- The convertible form of WikiDeal Credits. Cash Credits may be converted to CHF when platform revenue allows β without guarantee. Subject to 5% annual value increase (defined algorithm). Held in personal account (Priority 2). Tax applies at cash-out. Previously called "Cash Credits" or "Cash Reward" β those terms are deprecated. See Credits Explained β
- Miles Credits π
- Exchangeable for services and goods within Rings of Trust (agreements between β₯2 User Groups). Not convertible to CHF directly. Value determined by the Miles Market algorithm β supply and demand for real services. Usage coefficients range from 1 (restricted) to 10 (widely accepted). Previously called "WikiDeal Miles" β deprecated. See Credits Explained β
- Gift (voluntary Donation)
- A voluntary Donation from a funder or participant to the WikiDeal community pool. NOT a type of Credit in the main user flow. The amount of Gifts depends on the pressure degree: less pressure = more Gifts by default. Gift Credits is dedicated to subsidized subscriptions, User Group grants, and the common pool. Previously called "Gift Credits" β deprecated in main UI. See Credits Explained β and FAQ for full explanation.
- Ring / Ring of Trust
- An agreement between at least 2 User Groups that enables Miles Credits interoperability. Each Ring defines usage coefficients for complementary currency exchange. A User Group may participate in multiple Rings simultaneously.
- Programme
- A combination of multiple marketplaces enabling a global experience β e.g., housing + activities + training. Programmes are the operational backbone of WikiDeal. Each programme has defined steps, validation criteria, and Credit rewards. WikiDeal has 12 programmes. A single marketplace (babysitting, pet-sitting) is NOT a programme β it is a service used within one or more programmes. See All 12 Programmes β
- Miles Market
- Programme #12. The algorithmic mechanism for valuing Miles Credits based on supply and demand within the WikiDeal ecosystem. Uses a double indicator: value of service Γ availability/frequency. Non-speculative β all data is public and community-auditable. See Miles Market β
- Funding Stabilizer
- The automatic algorithm that adjusts the maximum permitted Cash Reward percentage based on the platform's financial health. When funds are insufficient to cover incompressible costs, the ceiling rises (up to 100% Personal). When funds are sufficient, the ceiling falls, directing more to Gift. Previously associated with "" mechanism β that terminology is deprecated.
- Subscription
- The foundational unit of WikiDeal participation. CHF 10 face value. Grants one vote in governance. Can be purchased directly, accumulated through platform activity, or received as a Donation. Required for Transactions and governance participation.
- Bonding Curve
- The fixed mathematical formula governing membership acquisition prices for Prototype 1 funders. Starts at Γ100 discount (CHF 0.10 per membership), ends at Γ30 (CHF 0.33 per membership) when CHF 1M is raised. The formula is immutable β it cannot be changed by any party.
- Priority 1
- The designation for Gift allocation. Funds distributed at Priority 1 are processed before Cash Reward funds. Funders who allocate entirely to Priority 1 effectively make a Donation to the community with no personal financial return.
- Priority 2
- The designation for Cash Reward allocation. Funds distributed at Priority 2 flow back to the individual funder. The distribution follows the 50/50 solidarity/FIFO formula.
- Membership income
- Revenue generated when users purchase Credits. Replaces deprecated term "memberships active." The asterisk notation (*partly or fully sold memberships) acknowledges that some memberships are sold in fractions accumulated over time, others in single Transactions.
- Open Call
- WikiDeal's continuous invitation for community proposals to improve or partially substitute elements of the current model. Evaluated seasonally. Previously called "Concours de projets" (deprecated). Proposals fall into two types: Improvement (enhance Prototype 1) or Substitution (replace elements). "Divergence/fork" proposals are out of scope.
- Living Lab
- A research environment combining observation, synthesis, and pilot experimentation. Replaces "Open Observatory." The anchor Living Lab is Ecopol, member of the European Network of Living Labs (ENoLL). Living Labs produce reports, blog content, and pilot proposals for the Open Call.
- User Group
- A community of WikiDeal members organised around a specific service category or geographic region. User Groups operate with local autonomy within WikiDeal's core principles. They set Commission rates, manage arbitration, and can launch their own bonding curve funding rounds.
- social entrepreneurship
- WikiDeal's economic philosophy: thousands of micro-s transacting on Infrastructure they collectively own, with Commissions at cost, surplus returned to community, and governance based on one-user-one-vote. Contrasted with macrocapitalism (value extraction by distant shareholders).
- Deprivatisation
- The process of progressively transferring platform ownership, value, and control from private hands to the user community. Distinct from nationalisation and traditional mutualism. WikiDeal's long-term goal is 100% community ownership with zero private shareholders.
- Exit to Community (E2C)
- A transition model for organisations moving from founder/investor control to community ownership. WikiDeal is designed as an E2C programme from inception, with progressive governance transfer built into its founding architecture.
- Early Funders
- Contributors who backed WikiDeal before Prototype 1 launched, including founding team members and historical ambassadors. They receive 50 million memberships (separate from the bonding curve) and participate in 10% of each user membership purchase. Individual identities are kept confidential; aggregate figures are public.
- Immutable Philosophies
- Core values of WikiDeal that do not change regardless of Open Call outcomes: the membership system, community governance, transparency, and at-cost Commissions. NOTE: The term "Immutable Rules" is deprecated and must not be used β rules can change. Only philosophies are described as immutable.
- WIL (hypothesis name)
- WikiDeal Investment Licence β a hypothesis name for the fundamental unit of WikiDeal participation, pending community validation. 1 WIL = 1 month of platform usage = CHF 1 nominal value. In the user interface, WikiDeal Credits appear as: Cash Credits (no guarantee*) π° and Miles Credits π. WIL gains 5% in CHF value each year (defined algorithm). It is not a financial security. The name "WIL" may evolve via the Open Call process. See Credits Explained β
- Cash Credits / WIL Cash
- The convertible form of WIL. Cash Credits can be redeemed for CHF when users pay their WikiDeal Membership subscription. Tax applies at the point of cash-out. Cash Credits is Priority 2 allocation. Previously called "Cash Reward" or "Personal Reward" β those terms remain in use but refer to the same concept.
- Gift Credits / WIL Don
- The Donation form of WIL. Gift Credits cannot be cashed out. It is allocated to community-benefit purposes: subsidized subscriptions for low-income users, User Group development grants, and the WikiDeal common pool. Gift Credits is Priority 1 allocation.
- WikiDeal Miles / WIL Miles
- The complementary currency form of WIL. Usable within Rings of Trust (agreements between β₯2 User Groups). Exchange coefficients range from 1 (restricted) to 10 (widely accepted). WikiDeal Miles enables time banking, resource sharing (housing, transport, food), and inter-community exchange without conversion to CHF.
- 5% Annual Value Increase
- A defined algorithm in WikiDeal Prototype 1: WIL nominal value in CHF increases by 5% each year. Starting at CHF 1.00, after 5 years 1 WIL = CHF 1.28, after 10 years 1 WIL = CHF 1.63. This provides a stable, predictable return anchored in CHF β comparable to conservative safe-haven instruments. The algorithm is immutable (cannot be changed by any party).
- Funder
- To "back" WikiDeal is to contribute financially to Prototype 1 via the bonding curve, receiving WikiDeal Credits in return. A "funder" (soutien) is a person who has done so. Funding is distinct from "supporting" (general goodwill) and from "investing" (financial return-seeking). A funder simultaneously makes a contribution, purchases conditional rights, and joins the governance community.
- Ring of Trust
- A formal agreement between at least 2 WikiDeal User Groups enabling WikiDeal Miles interoperability. Each Ring defines the usage coefficients for complementary currency exchange within its member groups. Rings are the foundation of the WikiDeal Miles ecosystem. A User Group may participate in multiple Rings simultaneously.
- Maturity Score
- A composite indicator (1β5 stars) measuring the health and readiness of each WikiDeal marketplace portal. Based on 7 indicators: number of users, dissatisfaction rate, improvement proposals appreciated, urgency (bugs), deployment degree, tool interconnection, and usage decline prevention. Higher maturity = fewer Open Call resources needed. Reviewed quarterly by the Living Lab.
- Open Call
- WikiDeal's seasonal invitation for community proposals to improve or partially substitute elements of the current model. Evaluated on March 21, June 21, September 21, and December 21 each year. Prize pool: CHF 10,000 cash + 1,000,000 WikiDeal Credits. Open Call allocation is adjusted based on each use case's Maturity Score. See also: Open Calls & Maturity.
- Boost
- The auto-regulation mechanism that adjusts the maximum permitted Cash Reward percentage based on the ratio of platform funding to incompressible costs. When funds are insufficient, the ceiling rises (up to 100% Cash). When funds are healthy, the ceiling falls, redirecting more to Gift Credits. Previously called "Funding Stabilizer" β both terms are acceptable. Invented by ThΓ©o Bondolfi.
- Deprivatization
- The process of markets being reclaimed by users as commons β analogous to what Wikipedia did for encyclopedic knowledge. WikiDeal's mission is to deprivatize extractive digital markets (babysitting, transport, housing, fundraising) by replacing platform capitalism with community governance and at-cost Commissions. Inspired by Wikimedia Foundation's approach to knowledge.
- Co-opetition
- The WikiDeal model where User Groups simultaneously compete (for users, quality, Commission rates) and cooperate (sharing protocols, Infrastructure, Rings of Trust). Transparent co-opetition stimulates improvement without destructive rivalry. Inspired by Wikimedia's chapter model and cooperative movement principles.
- Portal (Wikimedia-adapted)
- A WikiDeal marketplace dedicated to a specific service category (babysitting, taxi cooperative, microcredit, etc.). Analogous to a Wikimedia portal (a curated entry point to a topic area). Each portal has its own User Group, governance rules, Commission structure, and Maturity Score.
- Category (Wikimedia-adapted)
- A classification system for WikiDeal pages and portals, inspired by Wikipedia's category system. Categories group related pages: e.g., Category:Marketplace portals, Category:Contracts, Category:Governance. Categories enable navigation and discovery across the WikiDeal knowledge base.