Daniel Berdichevsky
Encyclopedia
Daniel Berdichevsky also known as DemiDec Dan (born July 20, 1976) is a noted figure in international education, the application of online social networks, and in the design of persuasive technologies. Berdichevsky is also the founder of DemiDec
DemiDec
DemiDec Resources is a private company founded in 1994 by now-CEO Daniel Berdichevsky that annually publishes study materials for the United States Academic Decathlon, hosts the World Scholar's Cup and co-operates several "study academies" around the world....

, a corporation that provides study materials for the United States Academic Decathlon
United States Academic Decathlon
The United States Academic Decathlon is an annual high school academic competition organized by the non-profit United States Academic Decathlon Association. The competition consists of seven multiple choice tests, two performance events, and an essay...

 and annually hosts the World Scholar's Cup
World Scholar's Cup
The World Scholar's Cup is an international team academic tournament with students participating from over 30 countries. The competition was founded by DemiDec, in particular by Daniel Berdichevsky, DemiDec's president, in 2006. Other directors of the program include Zac Ellington and Bunnie Hadsall...

.

DemiDec

In the 1980s and 1990s, the United States Academic Decathlon had few third-party companies that wrote study materials for students, and individual teams had to do most of the research themselves. Berdichevsky had been part of the Taft High School Academic Decathlon in the 1992–1993 season, but dropped out because he was "too scared of giving a speech". Despite this, Berdichevsky became team captain for the 1993–94 season. Berdichevsky and his teammates would go on to win the United States Academic Decathlon National Championship that year with the help of their coach, Dr. Berchin, who had also led a team to victory in 1989. Berdichevsky maintained the highest individual score (9,297 points) in Decathlon history until a slew of high scores in 2008 and 2009 bumped him from the top.

Six weeks after the competition, Berdichevsky and teammate Andrew Salter started creating guides and examinations for the next season. Their first year's product was very small and criticized for its errors, though it earned the two almost $20,000 in 5 months. However, when their old coach Dr. Berchin joined the operation the following year, DemiDec gained more stability and Berdichevsky decided to continue with the venture.

Academic Decathlon

Berdichevsky is a member of the Board of Directors of the California, Massachusetts, and Maine Academic Decathlon state organizations and was the highest scorer in the Academic Decathlon competition from 1994 to 2008. Berdichevsky's development of private preparation materials for the Academic Decathlon is credited by some as having helped move the Academic Decathlon toward publishing its own curriculum booklets.

World Scholar's Cup

Berdichevsky is the founder and curriculum director of the World Scholar's Cup
World Scholar's Cup
The World Scholar's Cup is an international team academic tournament with students participating from over 30 countries. The competition was founded by DemiDec, in particular by Daniel Berdichevsky, DemiDec's president, in 2006. Other directors of the program include Zac Ellington and Bunnie Hadsall...

, an international educational foundation that holds online and offline tournaments for students around the world. Participating countries include Singapore, Malaysia, Nigeria, Chile, Cambodia, Korea, the United States, Australia, Japan and others.

Persuasive Technology and Social Networks

Berdichevsky is presently completing edits on The Psychology of Facebook, a book on Facebook as a persuasive platform, due to be published in mid-2009. He recently joined the Board of Advisers of the social learning network FunnelBrain.

Berdichevsky's most well-known theoretical work has been On the ethics of persuasive technology. His first paper in the field was published in Communications of the ACM in 1998 and is studied in design and theory courses at leading universities, including MIT and the University of North Carolina
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill is a public research university located in Chapel Hill, North Carolina, United States...

, as well as having been referenced in journal articles.

In the paper, Berdichevsky and co-author Erik Neuenschwander posit a framework for the ethical design of technologies that aim to change user attitudes and behaviors:

What if home financial planning software persuaded its users to invest in the stock market? And what if the market then crashed, leaving the
users in financial ruin? Or, more subtly, what if the makers of the software arranged with certain companies to “push” their particular stocks? Would such designs differ in a morally relevant way from stockbrokers who encourage their clients to buy the stocks that earn them bonus commissions? They do, though in unexpected ways. That’s why our exploration of the ethics of persuasive technologies seeks to begin establishing a first set of principled guidelines for their design and implementation. Doing so requires us to apply to this new domain a number of questions (and answers) associated with earlier work in the ethics of persuasion and in the ethics of technology—especially computers. Until now, no one has looked specifically at the convergence of these fields.


Berdichevsky and Neuenschwander propose eight design principles, including what they term the Golden Rule of Persuasion:

The creators of a persuasive technology should never seek to persuade a person or persons of something they themselves would not consent to be persuaded of.


Their design principles were described in David Levy's 2006 book Robots Unlimited: Life in A Virtual Age as "add[ing] to those responsibilities imposed on robots and their designers by Asimov's Laws
Three Laws of Robotics
The Three Laws of Robotics are a set of rules devised by the science fiction author Isaac Asimov and later added to. The rules are introduced in his 1942 short story "Runaround", although they were foreshadowed in a few earlier stories...

."

In 2005, Berdichevsky co-authored another article, Analyzing the ethics of persuasive technology, on the subject.

VentureNova

In 2001, Berdichevsky was the associate managing director of VentureNova, a $9,000,000 venture fund financed by Casio Computer Corporation
Casio
is a multinational electronic devices manufacturing company founded in 1946, with its headquarters in Shibuya, Tokyo, Japan. Casio is best known for its electronic products, such as calculators, audio equipment, PDAs, cameras, musical instruments, and watches...

to invest in Internet appliances.

External links

More sources for the future:
  • http://santiago.usembassy.gov/OpenNews/asp/pagDefault.asp?argInstanciaId=2&argNoticiaId=4649&argEdicionId=41
  • http://edition.cnn.com/2009/TECH/06/23/why.retweet.twitter/

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The source of this article is wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.  The text of this article is licensed under the GFDL.
 
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