Freerice

Freerice
Type of site
Click-to-donate site
Owner The World Food Programme
Created by John Breen
Website freerice.com
Alexa rank 66,565 (April 24)[1]
Commercial Yes
Launched October 7, 2007 (2007-10-07)
Current status Active

Freerice is an ad-supported, free-to-play website that allows players to donate to charities by playing multiple-choice quiz games. For every question the user answers correctly, 10 grains of rice are donated via the World Food Programme. The available subjects include English vocabulary (the original subject with which the game launched), multiplication tables, pre-algebra, chemical symbols (basic and intermediate), English grammar, SAT, foreign language vocabulary for English speakers (French, German, Italian, Latin, and Spanish), human anatomy, geography (flags of the world, world capitals, country identification, and world landmarks), the identification of famous artwork, literature, quotations, and world hunger. A user's total score is displayed as a mound of rice and the number of grains.

History

The website went live on October 7, 2007 with 830 grains of rice donated on its first day. The site was created by John Breen, a computer programmer, to help his son study for the SAT exam.[2] The second word in its name was originally capitalized as "FreeRice." On 20 November 2007, the WFP launched a campaign to "feed a child for Thanksgiving," encouraging internet users "to take time out from traditionally the busiest online shopping period of the year and help the hungry" by playing the game.[3] For a brief while, the amount of rice donated per correct answer was increased to 20 grains, though this was reduced to 10 grains of rice per answer within a few months.

In March 2009, Breen donated the FreeRice website to the UN World Food Programme.[2]

Freerice 2.0 launch

In September 2010, the UN World Food Programme launched a new version of the game with social networking, groups, rankings and achievements. As part of the launch, the site dropped the second capitalization in its name, going from "FreeRice" to "Freerice."

Freerice Language Versions

In 2011, Freerice launched new language versions of the website in Spanish, French, Italian, Chinese and Korean, allowing users to play the popular game across a number of subjects in their own language for the first time. Freerice China is currently offline, as the World Food Programme has ended its contract with the partner responsible for building and maintaining it.

Freerice 3.0

On November 1, 2016, Free Rice announced that it will be rebuilding to Free Rice 3.0. Currently, a survey is accessible from Free Rice's homepage. It is meant to help the users improve Free Rice and offer their input.

Groups

The website allows creating groups to track the total donations of a group of players. Top group scores are displayed on a scoreboard.

Sustenance

Using the "click-to-donate" model, for every correct answer selected a sponsored advertisement is displayed below the questions. The total funds raised through the sponsored ads covers the cost of the rice donated. All the costs for running the website are covered by the site owner, the United Nations's World Food Programme or vendors supplying their services free of charge. The donations are distributed by the (WFP).

The most common countries receiving rice are Bangladesh, Cambodia, Bhutan, Uganda, and Nepal, but Freerice can travel all over the world (as of early 2008). Following the earthquake in Haiti, nearly 6 billion grains were donated to help communities there. By this time, the site's creator had given over US$213,000 to the WFP, which encouraged people to visit the website.[4]

Effectiveness

In its first ten months of operation, Freerice donated over 42 billion grains of rice. One month after the inception of the viral marketing program, users had earned enough points for one billion grains of rice. The United Nation's World Food Program stated that this amount could feed 50,000 people for one day,[5] since it takes 400 grams or about 19,200 grains of rice to feed one adult for a day.[6] Using this calculation, enough rice was donated in 2008 to feed over 6,000 people daily for each day of that year.[7] Since its inception, as of April 3, 2013, Freerice players had earned sufficient rice for over 10 million meals, assuming 2 meals per day.

Awards

Monthly count

Average number of adults fed per day by daily average of each month.
2014
Month Monthly grains of rice donated Overall grains of rice donated
January 2014 349,662,210 101,415,929,916[note 1]
February 2014 241,367,520 101,657,297,436
March 2014 219,342,840 101,876,640,276
April 2014 216,473,200 102,093,113,476
May 2014 191,988,980 102,285,102,456
June 2014 252,428,280 102,537,530,736
July 2014 145,472,000 102,683,002,736
August 2014 136,309,740 102,819,312,476
September 2014 138,291,660[11]
October 2014 123,305,060+[11]
NovemberDecember 2014 [12]
2016
Month Monthly grains of rice donated Overall grains of rice donated
January 2016 264,980,280
February 2016 525,172,070
March 2016 347,065,700
April 2016 199,722,090
May 2016 860,194,410
June 2016 742,793,630
July 2016 425,293,700
August 2016 130,513,090
September 2016 132,992,450
October 2016 196,426,640
November 2016 157,675,040

Total All Dates (as of August 2014): 102,819,312,476[note 1] [13]

Modified data as of November 30, 2016: 95,705,326,268.[14]

Milestones

References

  1. "Freerice.com Site Info". Alexa Internet. Retrieved 2014-04-01.
  2. 1 2 Ceceri, Kathy (2010-03-04). "Free Rice Expands Your Word Power and Feeds the Hungry".
  3. "Feed a child for Thanksgiving".
  4. Freerice in WFP's video log (accessed on February 7, 2008).
  5. "Web game provides rice for hungry". BBC News. 2007-11-10.
  6. http://www.slideshare.net/GreenBeingNancy/400-grams-of-rice
  7. "Total Donations By Date". Archived from the original on 2008-03-26. Retrieved 2008-03-28.
  8. Find of the Year 2007, Category Charity (accessed on February 7, 2008).
  9. http://web.archive.org/web/20101207184318/http://www.freerice.com/frmisc/totals
  10. 1 2 - Freerice totals - 2014 Oct 31 Only partial totals are available for October 31, but about as close as we're going to get for the full month as we currently have.
  11. The full year totals for Freerice.com have been glitched since at least Jan 2015 and now display negative numbers. Without these totals we cannot calculate overall grains donated.
  12. http://freerice.com/frmisc/totals
  13. "Totals | Freerice.com". freerice.com. Retrieved 2016-06-25.

Glitch notes

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 Freerice's totals seem to have glitched around September 2013. Comparing webarchive.org shots from May and Sept of 2013, the 2010 totals curiously drop from ~13 billion to 9 bil grains; also, closed months in 2013 suddenly increase as well (for example, January 2013 went from 274 mil to 786 mil). Finding it unlikely that billions of grains can be recalled nearly 3 years after they were eaten, I calculate the values here from previous records instead. Recalling how 2010 was the year Free Rice ("1.0") transitioned to Freerice 2.0, the "new" 2010 total seems strangely similar to amounts my records attribute to the original Free Rice. In other words, the new count resembles the result of subtracting 2.0 grains from the old 2010 count. While this result came out 19 mil grains higher than recorded for 1.0, that discrepancy may be explained by how the transition on the 7th of October had prevented this Wikipedian from recording "1.0" grains from the first 6 days of that month since initial 2.0 total page seemed to exclude them. (I imagine perhaps Freerice saw that the totals were less than expected but did not know they were missing from 2010, and so fudged the prior months of 2013 to make up for the missing grains?) -CodeHydro
  2. web.archive.org - Freerice totals - 2013 Sept 28
  3. web.archive.org - Freerice totals - 2013 May 29

Freerice glitched in late December 2015, and the yearly total became a negative number, thus subtracting the year's totals from the aggregate total. The problem has reappeared in 2015 and 2016, so the issue appear to be with 32-bit signed binary integers counting the grains. This explains why the displayed total is so much lower than the true total.

External links

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