Software Development
Arts / Philanthropy

How Taylor Swift inspired this Philly dev’s charity hack

A new tool lets you raise money for charity by streaming white noise.

Taylor Swift, inspiration. (Photo by Flickr user GabboT, used under a Creative Commons license)

Generate money for charity while you sleep.
It works like this: Loop a white noise track and the royalties will go toward charity. (In this case, Watsi and charity: water.)
Developer Chris Overcash built the tool, called Donate Your Streams, with his sister, Dana Overcash. They also created the tracks.
Try it
“Each person can generate ~$2.88 per night if they loop the tracks while sleeping,” Overcash wrote. “At scale this could generate A LOT of money for some great causes.”


They built it to show the Y Combinator Fellowship, to which they’re applying, that they could ship something. Overcash’s last charity hacking project was Project Burrito, which aimed to feed the needy with rewards meals earned through a shared Qdoba loyalty card.
Overcash, 32, of Chestnut Hill, was inspired by a band that did something similar to fund their tour and Taylor Swift’s accidental eight-second track of static that topped iTunes in Canada.

Engagement

Join the conversation!

Find news, events, jobs and people who share your interests on Technical.ly's open community Slack

Trending

Philly’s IT department fires long-tenured staff amid a high-level shakeup of priorities

Why is it so hard to find entry-level software engineering jobs?

This Week in Jobs: Get out there with 22 new job opportunities available to you!

Philly ‘tech walks’ encourage professionals to parade the streets — to build their networks

Technically Media