Timbuktu Storykeeper
- Hybrid of for-profit and nonprofit
'Traditional' Treatments of History Exacerbate Learning Inequities and Promote Historical Erasure and Loss of Oral Histories
Students from communities who have survived historical events like the Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade and systemic genocide are often challenged to warm up to history, as it is generally taught from the perspectives of those who were involved with or behind their cultural trauma.
This cultural disconnect can spill over to other subjects, creating resistance to education in general, with many subjects being viewed as coming from the same historical oppressors, leading to formal education being viewed as cultural indoctrination.
Selective or biased accounts of history have silenced many perspectives and stories of cultures who have traditionally relied on oral history to keep their memories and cultural identities alive.
In the USA, two communities who have traditionally relied on oral history and are currently facing the impending loss of narratives essential to the understanding of their place in the history of humanity are:
The Black American Community:
The past century has been one of unparalleled change for Black Americans, and there are still living witnesses who can provide firsthand accounts of events like the Tulsa Race Massacre and life in the Jim Crow South.
While historians and documentarians tend to focus on the stories of movement leaders and other well-known major players in historical events, there are scores of thousands of elderly African Americans whose personal histories from significant periods remain largely untold, and due to the inability of traditional documentary methods to scale, cannot be told using conventional historical approaches.
Native American Nations:
For many Native American nations, the ravages of time and systemic genocide have already erased much of their history and culture from the collective memory of the human race, and current societal shifts threaten to disconnect their past and future in ways that are existential threats to their cultural identities.
Our Native cultures are among the oldest continuous cultures in humanity, who have used oral traditions to preserve ancestral knowledge and perspectives for periods barely imaginable for most in our modern times, and if we do not act quickly to capture and preserve this knowledge of the ages entrusted to an aging and dwindling population of elders, many of the oldest stories of the human race will be lost to us all forever.
This problem is not limited to indigenous communities in the United States, but similar losses are happening across the globe as industrialization and societal attitudes that only value the present threaten to cause us to ignore many of our pasts until some future when it will be too late to ever know what we could learn today.
The preservation of and easy access to these stories represents a uniquely leverageable opportunity to capture the interest of students who identify with these communities and help them see themselves more as integral parts of the story of the human race.
“In the Future, Stories that were never Digitized will be indistinguishable from Stories that never Happened.”
- Ken Granderson
Use Smartphones to Capture Oral Histories of Historical Events and Make Them Easy to Find Online
We believe that making culturally relevant firsthand accounts of historical events easily searchable could help make history more relevant to students from historically disadvantaged backgrounds, and the BlackFacts team is uniquely positioned to make this happen.
Launched in 1997 as the Internet’s First Black History Search Engine, BlackFacts.com has been sharing Black History to a global audience longer than most people have been using the Internet, and today, with over one million articles in our databases is the world's largest single online source of Black History and Global News, used regularly by students throughout the USA and in several other countries.
The BlackFacts website is powered by a platform we call Timbuktu™, a three-phase content Aggregation, Classification and Syndication engine which:
- Aggregates Black History and News articles via automated and curated processes
- Classifies and links the articles based on shared references to people, places events and concepts via AI (Note: This contextual linkage is a core feature of the BlackFacts website that leads many visitors to spend significant amounts of time on the site compared to most other sites)
- Syndicates the articles by publishing them on the BlackFacts website, Diversity Schoolhouse ed-tech platform, BlackFacts Partner sites and email
You can see the linked stories in the Fact Cards displayed on any BlackFacts Video Series page like https://blackfacts.com/america or the News page https://blackfacts.com/news.
Our solution is called StoryKeeper - a new content sourcing module for Timbuktu that uses the Speech Recognition capabilities built into smartphones and modern web browsers to capture firsthand stories about historical events to make them searchable for students around the globe.
StoryKeeper will make capturing eyewitness accounts of major historical events as simple as sending a text message to Grandma who was there, and having her tell her story to her phone.
Built as a web page viewable on any internet-connected smartphone or computer, StoryKeeper will enable StoryTellers to share any number of Stories, which will be indexed and linked as BlackFacts articles as described earlier, with their actual voices available for students and historians to hear for all future times, an innovative and 21st Century way for history to be presented and preserved.
The anecdotal nature of stories captured by StoryKeeper will necessitate categorization separate from content from more trusted historical or journalistic sources, so the ultimate public display of StoryKeeper content is likely to happen on new web pages or websites, possibly in collaboration with organizations yet to be determined.
The initial scope of this project focuses on the implementation of the technical solution to capture these firsthand stories by leveraging the widespread penetration of mobile devices (over 80% in more than 100 countries, and greater than the population in many), recent advances in Artificial Intelligence, and the arrival of Just-In-Time Speech Recognition which does not require prior training to recognize a wide variety of voices and languages.
The two pilot beneficiary communities of Timbuktu StoryKeeper will be:
African Americans:
Many elderly African Americans have lived through the most dynamic century in the United States for people of people of African descent.
A few living witnesses to the Tulsa Race Massacre of 1921 are still with us, more have childhood recollections of frequent lynchings, the Jim Crow South, Civil Rights era, mass protests and Black politicians ascending to the highest offices of the land.
Many at the forefront of these historical events are known to the world, but millions of unknown others behind them will never be visited by reporters or historians, and even if they were known, budgets would prevent all but a scant few from ever having their stories told.
Making it possible for stories to be collected by just sending a text link to Grandma opens a potential sea change in how the narratives of Black Americans and others not well presented in mainstream history are collected.
The election of Barack Obama forever erased a question asked by untold millions who lived and died wondering if a Black person could ever become President of the United States from the collective consciousness of the human race.
StoryKeeper has the potential to make the expectation of regular people's firsthand accounts of historical events being unknown to all but friends and family an idea whose time has expired, replaced by expecting to find descriptions of events from various cultural perspectives on BlackFacts and other sites likely to follow suit.
Black History students will read or listen to people who met and marched with Dr. King, went to the first integrated schools, attended the March on Washington and more, learning about events that have shaped the USA from those who were part of them, not those who just studied them.
Native Americans:
Our second pilot audience is Native Americans, many of whose Elders are their culture’s last chances to preserve stories passed down orally for hundreds, if not thousands of years.
It can be argued that no other cultures have been ignored, mistreated and devalued by mainstream history more than the First Nations of the Americas.
While we cannot turn the clock back and capture stories that have been forever lost, we can use the technologies that make StoryKeeper possible to do our best to capture and preserve endless stories of tragedy, triumph and everyday life from some of the oldest cultures in the human family.
From a practical and actionable perspective, this opportunity has never before been as possible as it is today, and as these oral histories are often only known by a dwindling population of elders, we have no time to lose if we intend to ensure that their firsthand stories and wisdom lives on for future generations.
Once captured by StoryKeeper, these Native Elder stories will ensure that students from future generations will be able to search, read and hear them, no matter where they live, and their people's histories will be saved forever.
The BlackFacts Team has over a half century of combined experience delivering advanced technology solutions to positively impact communities of color.
Technical lead Ken Granderson is a Black MIT Alumnus born, raised and outside of college has almost always lived in predominately Black, low-to-moderate income communities, and since discovering in 1993 that he could chart his own career path with technology, has been a 'technology evangelist' for Black communities, and has been responsible for pioneering multiple culturally-oriented offline and online projects since 1995, including:
• Creating a multimedia CD-ROM version of a book on Boston's Black History in 1995
• Putting Boston's communities of color online in 1996
• Launching the Internet's first Black History Search Engine, BlackFacts.com, in 1997
• Putting Boston's Black Newspaper (the Bay State Banner) online in 2001
• Demonstrating self-service online event and business directory listings before EventBrite and Yelp by 2-4 years on Roxbury.com in 2002
• Architecting, building and maintaining the Official Website of the Government of Saint Lucia from 2013 to the present
• Architecting and building Timbuktu, the AI-powered Content Aggregation, Classification and Syndication system that powers BlackFacts to the present day in 2017.
All of these innovations, along with many others are fully documented by newspaper and magazine articles, television interview, contemporaneously created presentations and more at https://kengranderson.com.
You can read about or interact with some of them at the following links:
https://blackfacts.com
https://www.blackhistory.mit.e...
https://www.amazon.com/Black-S...
https://alum-mit-edu.ezproxyberklee.flo.org/slice/bui...
https://diversityschoolhouse.c...
Despite our levels of innovative thinking and demonstrations of our ability to execute, we have previously operated in networks of community organizations and politicians who were not able to connect us with partners who could give our work wider visibility, audience or resources.
Thus, we have always been self-funded, and our reach of 200,000 social media followers and close to 2 million average monthly search impressions is based on our longevity and organic support from within members of Black communities predominately located in the USA.
We believe that collaboration with individuals and organizations that have vision, resources and sincere intentions to be communities of color move forward will enable us to not only implement StoryKeeper, but to eventually launch and scale several other projects that will improve the lives of millions across the Diaspora, like BlackPeople.com, which we have wanted to launch as a professional and social networking online destination since September 1999, as shown in our business plan bearing that date: https://documents.blackfacts.c...
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- Ensure that all children are learning in good educational environments, particularly those affected by poverty or displacement.
- 4. Quality Education
- 10. Reduced Inequalities
- 11. Sustainable Cities and Communities
- 16. Peace, Justice, and Strong Institutions
- Prototype
The Timbuktu StoryKeeper module is currently in the Prototype state of development.
From a technological perspective, we have the Speech Recognition, conversion to Timbuktu Manuscript and Syndication via Timbuktu Griot operating in our test environments.
We are also currently engaged in usability testing with high-fidelity PowerPoint mockups with a half dozen African American elders we have connected with through family and friends.
For the Black American demographic, we have been building connections with organizations in the areas of Community Development, Politics and Clergy in New York City, and for the Native American demographic, we are arranging to meet with the Chief of the Cheroenhaka-Nottoway through one of our associates who is a Tribe member.
We are also currently planning social media messaging to coincide with the upcoming Juneteenth holiday for Black elders and will have messaging tailored for Native communities in November when Native American History Month is celebrated.
We have not yet done much brainstorming in regard to the ultimate end user-facing systems that will feature content captured and organized by StoryKeeper.
In lieu of relying on standalone websites that may require significant amounts of planning, collaboration and resources to be viable, a longtime fallback plan has always been to simply include a new page in the BlackFacts website, titled “Firsthand Accounts” or “Personal Stories” to distinguish them from content sourced from academic or journalistic online sources.
My entire technical career of 30 years has been committed to conceiving, coding, deploying and supporting technology solutions intended to positively impact underserved communities, especially communities of color.
While I have done this in ways that have directly impacted hundreds of thousands and have been viewed by scores of millions over the years, it has been done from a self-funded basis and in relative isolation due to the timing and geographic location of all of my early work.
I believe that we have finally reached enough widespread familiarity with advanced technologies, as well as enough people who have seen that we have NOT leveraged the Internet to live up to its early expectations of delivering widespread democratization and supporting fair access to opportunities, that today there is a more fertile landscape for innovative ideas that leverage online technologies to positively impact historically disadvantaged communities.
In almost all cases where I see technology initiatives focusing on communities of color, they are operating only at the most basic levels and generally from a 'deficit narrative' of trying to get a foot in the door, while my 'normal' for my entire career has been using the most current technologies and delivering advanced applications on par with or ahead of mainstream names and companies known throughout the industry and world today.
From collaborating with a handful of friends in 1996 to put Boston's Black communities online (https://www.blackhistory.mit.e...) or single-handedly architecting, coding and supporting the Official Website of the Government of Saint Lucia (https://govt.lc), I know that it only takes a handful of committed tech visionaries to set the stage for potentially massive improvements for many people, so I believe that getting greater visibility for both our current projects and those still on the drawing board will be the catalyst for more innovative, out of the box tech solutions to be conceived and deployed to help foster greater equity across a variety of communities.
- Financial (e.g. accounting practices, pitching to investors)
- Human Capital (e.g. sourcing talent, board development)
- Monitoring & Evaluation (e.g. collecting/using data, measuring impact)
- Public Relations (e.g. branding/marketing strategy, social and global media)
21st Century Approach: StoryKeeper introduces a modern method for capturing and preserving historical narratives, from communities whose stories have been traditionally marginalized or overlooked.
Recording oral histories through mobile devices fundamentally transforms how these narratives are collected, preserved, and shared.
Key Innovations:
1. Preservation of the Original Speaker’s Voice: Based on privacy choices, original audio can be saved and played back for future users, linking key topics, characters and events and the original audio references to them. Both the words and actual voices of past times will be captured and preserved for all perpetuity.
2. Integration with NLP and AI: Using NLP processing and AI, StoryKeeper simultaneously presents ‘both sides’ of historical events, issues and personalities, presenting history in a nuanced manner never before possible from traditional approaches.
3. Scalability and Accessibility: StoryKeeper will require just a mobile device and internet connection, so almost anyone can document stories from virtually any location at any time. This shift to the role of telling the stories of humanity has never before been possible and can help redefine ‘history’ as capturing a diverse array of narratives, rather than just the priorities, analyses and perspectives of traditional academic sources.
Catalyzing Broader Positive Impacts:
- Empowering Communities: StoryKeeper helps put communities in control of their narratives. This will lead to greater community pride, a stronger sense of identity and a greater sense of individual as well as collective agency by having greater control over the stories being told in and about communities who have been historically ignored or disrespected by mainstream history.
- Educational Resource: The stories captured by StoryKeeper will provide a valuable resource for educators, researchers, and the general public, offering fresh perspectives and a more comprehensive understanding of history.
- Encouraging Similar Initiatives: StoryKeeper could inspire other initiatives for preserving cultural and historical narratives, particularly among other groups that face similar risks of cultural erosion. With a foundation of scalable tech, StoryKeeper can empower communities of any history and background, and can support additional cultural or other types of groups.
Market and Landscape Change:
- Shift in Historical Documentation: StoryKeeper challenges traditional methods of historical documentation that often rely on written records or focus on prominent figures. It democratizes history, so anyone can record and share their story.
- Inspiration for Policy and Cultural Preservation: StoryKeeper can influence cultural preservation policies and practices, emphasizing the importance of inclusivity and the preservation of oral traditions as critical elements of cultural heritage.
- Catalyzing Adoption of Advanced Technologies by Mainstream Academia: We see little evidence that even the most prestigious and well-known academics use technologies more sophisticated than the 1990s, and the potential to overshadow work that is essentially locked away in ivory towers by academics unaware or disinterested in leveraging today’s technologies may be a catalyst for them to catch up with the rest of us.
StoryKeeper not only solves the problem of Historical Erasure, but also can transform the landscape of historical documentation, making it more inclusive, accessible, and representative of our diverse global community.
Theory of Change for Timbuktu StoryKeeper
Logical Framework:
1. Activities:
- Deploy the StoryKeeper module as part of the Timbuktu content engine.
- Utilize speech-to-text technology to capture oral histories directly from storytellers using mobile devices.
- Process and categorize these stories using natural language processing (NLP) and AI to identify and link thematic elements across the digital archive.
2. Immediate Outputs:
- A growing digital archive of transcribed and categorized stories from historically marginalized communities.
- Increased accessibility of these stories to the public through the BlackFacts.com platform and other affiliate sites.
- Engagement from the target communities in sharing and documenting their personal and communal histories.
3. Longer-term Outcomes:
- Preservation of cultural histories and personal narratives that might otherwise be lost, ensuring these stories remain a part of the global historical record.
- Enhanced understanding and appreciation of these communities’ histories among the broader public, leading to greater cultural awareness and sensitivity.
- Empowerment of individuals within these communities by giving them a platform to share their stories and contribute to the historical narrative.
Evidence to Support the Links:
- Technological Feasibility: Research on speech recognition technologies indicates a high potential for accurately capturing spoken language across various dialects and accents, which is critical for the diverse target audience of StoryKeeper.
- Cultural Impact Studies: Studies on cultural preservation demonstrate that having access to one's history significantly enhances community cohesion and individual identity, particularly in communities where oral traditions are dominant.
- Pilot Feedback: Initial conversations with elderly African American communities has shown positive engagement and an enthusiastic response to the opportunity to record their histories, providing preliminary evidence that the solution meets a felt need.
Supporting Research and Data:
- Third-party Research: Academic research into the impacts of digital storytelling on minority communities highlights its potential to foster greater understanding and empathy across cultural divides.
- Impact Evaluation: Ongoing evaluations of the StoryKeeper prototype will collect data on user engagement and satisfaction, which will help refine the approach and prove its effectiveness.
- Interviews with Target Population: Conversations with potential users have underscored the importance of preserving their stories and have informed the development of the StoryKeeper platform to ensure it is user-friendly and culturally respectful.
Conclusion: The theory of change for Timbuktu StoryKeeper is grounded in a clear understanding of how technology can serve as a bridge between traditional oral histories and modern digital archives. By enabling the direct capture and processing of these stories, StoryKeeper not only preserves important cultural narratives but also enhances the global understanding of diverse histories. This approach is supported by technological feasibility, cultural impact studies, and direct feedback from the communities involved, ensuring that the activities lead logically to the desired outputs and outcomes.
Impact Goals for Timbuktu StoryKeeper
Impact Goals:
- Preserve and Digitize 10,000 Stories within Three Years: Aim to capture a wide array of narratives from elderly African Americans and Native American communities, ensuring these stories are preserved for future generations.
- Enhance Cultural Understanding and Awareness: Increase public awareness and appreciation of the histories and cultures of the target communities by 50% among users of the BlackFacts.com platform and associated networks.
- Empower Storytellers and Communities: Empower at least 90% of participants by giving them a platform to share their stories, contributing to a sense of pride and ownership over their cultural heritage.
Measuring Progress:
- Number of Stories Captured and Digitized: Track the total number of stories recorded, transcribed, and archived. This will be the primary indicator of success for the goal of story preservation.
- User Engagement Metrics: Measure the interaction with the archived stories on the BlackFacts.com platform, such as page views, shares, and mentions on social media. These metrics will help gauge increased public awareness and appreciation.
- Participant Feedback Surveys: Conduct regular surveys with the storytellers and community members to assess their sense of empowerment and satisfaction with the StoryKeeper initiative. This will help evaluate the impact on the storytellers themselves.
Alignment with UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs):
- SDG 4 (Quality Education): By providing accessible and inclusive educational content through the stories preserved, StoryKeeper contributes to the availability of quality education materials that reflect diverse cultural histories.
- SDG 11 (Sustainable Cities and Communities): StoryKeeper helps to strengthen efforts to protect and safeguard the world’s cultural and natural heritage, especially concerning indigenous and minority communities.
- SDG 16 (Peace, Justice, and Strong Institutions): Promoting inclusive societies by ensuring public access to information and protecting fundamental freedoms aligns with StoryKeeper’s goals of inclusivity and representation in historical narratives.
Additional Indicators:
- Demographic and Geographic Reach: Track the diversity and spread of story contributors to ensure a broad representation of experiences and backgrounds.
- Content Utilization: Monitor how the digital content is being used by educators, researchers, and the general public, which will provide insights into the educational impact of the project.
By focusing on these specific, measurable goals and aligning them with broader global objectives, Timbuktu StoryKeeper aims to achieve a transformational impact on both the individual lives of its participants and the collective understanding of cultural and historical narratives. Progress toward these goals is monitored through a combination of quantitative and qualitative methods, ensuring a comprehensive understanding of the initiative’s impact.
The Timbuktu Platform and StoryKeeper are built on top of the Microsoft stack, using:
- Dedicated Windows 2019 Hosted Servers
- SQL Server 2016 database
- Custom SQL Stored Procedures
- REST APIs written in C#
- HTML5 Web Applications using AngularJS
- Browser / Device-native Speech Recognition
- Custom Windows Service applications
- Third-Party APIs from:
- OpenAI
- IBM Watson
- Ujeebu
The entire platform is architected, coded and maintained by Ken Granderson.
- A new application of an existing technology
- Artificial Intelligence / Machine Learning
- Crowd Sourced Service / Social Networks
- Software and Mobile Applications
The BlackFacts Team is comprised of two members:
- Ken Granderson, Full-Time Software Architect, Full Stack Developer, Database and DevOps Administrator.
- Dale Dowdie, Full-Time General, Business Development, Relationship and Project Manager.
The StoryKeeper module has just started development in the past month, but it is being built as a new module on top of the foundation of the Timbuktu™ engine, which has been in 24x7x365 operation for seven years, since 2017.
The BlackFacts Team is currently comprised of two Black males, and past ventures and teams that we have respectively operated included employees and consultants from a variety of cultures and backgrounds, as well as female lead software developers and project managers as far back as the 1990s.
For-Profit Entity: BlackFacts.com LLC
- Core Activities:
- Development, maintenance, and sale of software-as-a-service (SaaS) applications focused on educational technology, such as the Ed-Tech Platform Diversity Schoolhouse.
- Management of the technological infrastructure for the BlackFacts.com website, which provides free access to Black History, articles, videos, and current news.
- Revenue Streams:
- SaaS Sales: Selling subscriptions of the educational software SaaS applications to current B2B clients in the K-12 education sector, future B2B clients in community and faith-based organizations, and B2C clients in the Homeschooling community and on an individual basis.
- Custom Online Application Development: Architecture and development of complex online business applications generally in the space of content management and management of online training systems that require highly customized workflows.
- Market Strategy:
- Target educational institutions looking for comprehensive, culturally inclusive educational tools from both a bottom-up approach, reaching out to principals and superintendents, and a top-down approach, engaging school district leadership
- Leverage the content and traffic from the BlackFacts.com platform to showcase the capabilities of the software solutions, thereby driving SaaS sales.
Non-Profit Entity: BlackFacts Education Foundation
- Core Activities:
- Funding and managing the content development for the BlackFacts.com website, including the production of educational videos.
- Covering operational expenses related to content distribution on the BlackFacts.com website to ensure it remains free for users.
- Supporting Public Interest Online Applications developed by the BlackFacts Team like Say Their Names, Civic Chat, Voting While Black and My Communities. StoryKeeper will be included in the Foundation portfolio of Public Interest Online Applications.
- Revenue Streams:
- Fundraising: Traditional fundraising activities, including grants from foundations, individual donations, and fundraising events targeted at supporters of educational and cultural preservation causes.
- Partnerships: Forming partnerships with other non-profits, educational bodies, and cultural institutions to fund and support shared objectives, particularly in cultural education and preservation.
- Impact Objectives:
- Provide high-quality, accessible educational content about Black History and current events to a global audience.
- Enhance public understanding and appreciation of Black History through free, widely accessible educational resources.
Synergy Between Entities:
- The for-profit and non-profit entities operate synergistically. While the for-profit develops and sells educational software, enhancing the technological delivery of content, the non-profit ensures the content itself is rich, engaging, and freely accessible, fulfilling an educational mission.
- The visibility and user engagement driven by the free content on BlackFacts.com can enhance the marketability and perceived value of the SaaS products, potentially increasing sales and user adoption rates.
This dual structure allows BlackFacts to maximize its impact by combining the strengths of both the for-profit and non-profit sectors, ensuring a robust approach to both educational content delivery and financial sustainability.
- Organizations (B2B)
Financial Sustainability Plan for Timbuktu StoryKeeper
Revenue Streams:
1. Grants and Donations: As a non-profit entity under the BlackFacts Education Foundation, StoryKeeper will focus on securing grants from organizations dedicated to cultural preservation, education, technology for social good, and minority empowerment. Efforts will also be made to attract individual donors through crowdfunding platforms and direct appeals, targeting those who are passionate about cultural heritage and history.
2. Partnerships and Sponsorships: Forming partnerships with cultural, educational, and historical organizations that can sponsor a future standalone storytelling site or specific storytelling projects. This includes collaborations with tech companies interested in supporting innovative uses of technology in cultural preservation.
3. Platform Licensing: Licensing the platform to organizations interested in having a StoryKeeper site that serves their cultural, ethnic, faith or lifestyle community with authentic, first-person narratives for their projects.
Long-term Financial Strategy:
- Diversifying Grant Sources: Continuously applying for a broader range of grants and funding opportunities, both domestically and internationally, to support expansion and continuous improvement of the platform.
- Expanding Partnership Opportunities: Actively seeking new partnerships and sponsorships, particularly with organizations and companies investing in social impact projects.
- Licensing Strategy: Developing a structured approach to content licensing, ensuring it supports the project's sustainability without compromising its non-profit ethos.
- BlackFacts.com LLC Growth: As BlackFacts.com LLC grows in revenue, it will be able to support the BlackFacts Education Foundation and its projects as part of its corporate operating budget, eventually removing the need for the Foundation to seek external funding. As StoryKeeper is an additional module to an existing framework, its primary cost impact will come in the form of storage of recordings, which are not expected to grow at a rate that will create an unsustainable cost burden.
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Founder / CTO
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Co-Founder/CEO
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Software Engineer Volunteer