Monday, November 3, 2008

seven years

. . .


corruption burns through $1.5 trillion annually
. . .




Barely seven - closer to six - years remain before global deadlines in 2015 run out on aid agreements signed by the world's developed nations.




The agreements were signed in Paris in 2005, members of the powerful OECD group once again promising to meet aid targets of US$195 billion. Most also agreed to a higher percentage of aid, but, three years later, the OECD average is half what it should be. Six of 22 countries have not yet set a schedule for reaching targets. Starting in 2007, global economic crisis gathered force in 2008, wiping trillions of dollars off share markets, costing taxpayers huge sums to bail out private bankers, pushing aid priorities even further back.




TTT, total transparency tools are aimed at clawing back a percentage from inefficiencies like corruption - and at increasing that percentage each year.




. . .

corruption

. . .




. . .





Corruption costs the global economy more than every other inefficiency combined, and, by sheer priority alone, is the founding target of TTT, total transparency tools.

In 2000, the World Bank put their estimated costs from corruption as high as US$1.5 trillion a year, when the global economy was worth US$30 million, or about 5 %.

In today's dollars, the global economy was last year worth around US$58 trillion, meaning a 5% loss represents at least US$2.9 trillion annually. The United Nations estimates almost all deaths from starvation and disease could be prevented for around US$195 billion a year, reports poverty.com - an aid watchdog.

SOLUTIONS

. . .

avaiki

. . .

avaiki refers here to avaiki nius agency, a volunteer non-profit involved in establishing charity trust status in Aotearoa, New Zealand.

total transparency tools are registering under avaiki trust. All proceeds from licensing of this open governance brand accrue to objectives of avaiki trust.

Charity trust status enables avaiki to protect intellectual copyright associated with combining the triple T acronym, TTT, with the green and white logo on these pages, and, the words "total transparency tools."

. . .

email-2-web


. . .

Using email is the most common on the internet by far.

Total transparency tools give leaders a way to keep their communities updated with issues and events. Transparency leaders can also use TTT to publish bank alerts online, also via email.

Under TTT, email-2-web is an attempt at a simple description of web2 software that auto-publishes email to the world wide web.

. . .

governance











. . .

TTT, total transparency tools extend existing email skills, enabling users to automatically publish to web pages as easy as clicking send.

Using an existing skills base like email users sees TTT lower barriers, widen bottlenecks and remove the gatekeepers that stop people from fuller online participation in due process. Providing user ability to not just access information but also create feedback with comments and rating reviews are essential to providing interactivity to transparency and accountability systems across sectors.

In governance terms, TTT positions near so-called bleeding-edge notions of 'radical transparency' and creates future proofing by looping web2 social networks through ordinary emails.

. . .

Sunday, November 2, 2008

contact

. . .






Jason "tatini" Brown
founder
TTT
avaiki.nius@gmail.com

cell +6421 02484560

. . .


. . .

Saturday, November 1, 2008

projects

. . .

Three projects are in progress under TTT, Total Transparency Tools.

latest:

TTT knight news challenge - garage
TTT knight news challenge - final
TTT knight news challenge - word

3 top projects:

2004 Avaiki News Agency
2005 Project JPK
2007 Curriculum Veritas

Each are testing various aspects of TTT, including public publishing of bank accounts, organisational queries, and donations.

. . .

home

. . .























. . .