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This app makes it fun to pick up litter

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    This story starts with these two --
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    my kids.
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    We were hiking in the Oakland woods
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    when my daughter noticed
    a plastic tub of cat litter in a creek.
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    She looked at me and said,
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    "Daddy ...
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    that doesn't go there."
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    When she said that,
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    it reminded me of summer camp.
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    On the morning of visiting day,
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    right before they'd let our anxious
    parents come barreling through the gates,
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    our camp director would say,
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    "Quick! Everyone go pick up
    five pieces of litter."
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    You get a couple hundred kids
    each picking up five pieces,
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    and pretty soon you've got
    a much cleaner camp.
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    So I thought,
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    why not apply that crowdsourced
    cleanup model to the entire planet?
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    And that was the inspiration
    for Litterati.
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    The vision is to create
    a litter-free world.
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    Let me show you how it started.
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    I took a picture of a cigarette
    using Instagram.
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    Then I took another photo ...
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    and another photo ...
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    and another photo ...
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    and I noticed two things.
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    One: litter became artistic
    and approachable.
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    And two:
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    at the end of a few days,
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    I had 50 photos on my phone
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    and I had picked up each piece,
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    and I realized that I was keeping a record
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    of the positive impact
    I was having on the planet.
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    That's 50 less things that you might see,
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    or you might step on,
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    or some bird might eat.
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    So I started telling people
    what I was doing,
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    and they started participating.
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    One day,
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    this photo showed up from China,
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    and that's when I realized that Litterati
    was more than just pretty pictures;
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    we were becoming a community
    that was collecting data.
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    Each photo tells a story.
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    It tells us who picked up what,
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    a geotag tells us where
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    and a [time stamp] tells us when.
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    So I built a Google map,
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    and started plotting the points
    where pieces were being picked up.
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    And through that process,
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    the community grew,
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    and the data grew.
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    My two kids go to school
    right in that bullseye.
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    Litter.
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    It's blending into
    the background of our lives,
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    but what if we brought it
    to the forefront?
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    What if we understood exactly
    what was on our streets,
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    our sidewalks
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    and our schoolyards?
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    How might we use that data
    to make a difference?
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    Well, let me show you.
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    The first is with cities.
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    San Francisco wanted to understand
    what percentage of litter was cigarettes.
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    Why?
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    To create a tax.
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    So they put a couple of people
    in the streets with pencils and clipboards
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    who walked around collecting information
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    which led to a 20-cent tax
    on all cigarette sales.
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    And then they got sued ...
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    by big tobacco,
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    who claimed that collecting information
    with pencils and clipboards
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    is neither precise nor provable.
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    The city called me and asked
    if our technology could help ...
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    not sure they realized that our
    technology was my Instagram account --
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    (Laughter)
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    But I said, "Yes we can."
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    (Laughter)
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    And we can tell you if that's
    a Parliament or a Pall Mall.
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    Plus, every photograph
    is geotagged and [time stamped],
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    providing you with proof.
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    Four days and 5,000 pieces later,
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    our data was used in court to not
    only defend but double the tax,
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    generating an annual recurring
    revenue of four million dollars
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    for San Francisco to clean itself up.
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    Now, during that process
    I learned two things.
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    One: Instagram is not the right tool --
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    (Laughter)
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    so we built an app.
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    And two:
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    if you think about it,
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    every city in the world
    has a unique litter fingerprint,
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    and that fingerprint provides
    both the source of the problem
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    and the path to the solution.
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    If you could generate a revenue stream
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    just by understanding
    the percentage of cigarettes,
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    well, what about coffee cups ...
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    or soda cans ...
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    or plastic bottles?
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    If you could fingerprint San Francisco,
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    well, how about Oakland ...
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    or Amsterdam ...
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    or somewhere much closer to home?
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    And what about brands?
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    How might they use this data
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    to align their environmental
    and economic interests?
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    There's a block in downtown Oakland
    that's covered in blight.
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    The Litterati community got together
    and picked up 1500 pieces.
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    And here's what we learned.
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    Most of that litter came from
    a very well know taco brand.
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    Most of that brand's litter
    were their own hot sauce packets,
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    and most of those hot sauce packets
    hadn't even been opened.
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    The problem and the path
    to the solution --
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    well, maybe that brand only
    gives out hot sauce upon request,
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    or installs bulk dispensers,
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    or comes up with more
    sustainable packaging.
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    How does a brand take
    an environmental hazard,
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    turn it into an economic engine,
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    and become an industry hero?
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    If you really want to create change,
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    there's no better place to start
    than with our kids.
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    A group of fifth graders picked up
    1247 pieces of litter
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    just in their schoolyard.
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    And they learned that the most
    common type of litter
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    were the plastic straw wrappers
    from their own cafeteria.
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    So these kids went to their
    principal and asked,
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    "Why are we still buying straws?"
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    And they stopped.
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    And they learned that individually
    they could each make a difference,
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    but together they created an impact.
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    It doesn't matter if you're
    a student or a scientist,
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    whether you live in Honolulu or Hanoi,
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    this is a community for everyone.
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    It started because of two little kids
    in the Northern California woods,
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    and today it's spread across the world.
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    And you know how we're getting there?
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    One piece at a time.
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    Thank you.
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    (Applause)
Title:
This app makes it fun to pick up litter
Speaker:
Jeff Kirschner
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
06:10

English subtitles

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