I'm sure by now you've all heard of Kickstarter, a web portal which allows people to post videos making appeals for funds, while using Amazon's payment processing system to allow people to easy make payment contributions towards these various appeals/projects.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nK8zEDdCvd4
Recently, videogame maker DoubleFine raised a record $1M in 24 hours, appealing for funds to help them make a particular videogame:
http://au.pc.gamespy.../1218408p1.html
Appeals are only posted after Kickstarter approves them. For some reason, they don't allow appeals relating to medical research. (Not sure why - legal liability? I'll have to find out more.)
But what if they did allow them? Or what if some other web portal were to specialize in fund-raising appeals for spontaneous projects on medical research? ("CureStarter"?)
There are plenty of famous high-profile diseases with famous high-profile victims which have managed to erect a strong fund-raising movement around them.
But what about all those little guys out there, who have an illness they'd badly like a cure for, but they're just not important enough to the medical or money-giving powers-that-be?
What if you could have a "CureStarter" site, which would allow people to spontaneously self-organize to issue appeals to the public to donate funds, donate researchers or research time, donate their personal genomic data, donate personal medical logs - donate whatever - so that their disease could see progress for a cure.
A CureStarter site could help empower people, and get research going that might not have otherwise happened.
What do you think? Comments? Critiques?