We pause our regularly scheduled programming for a brief digression into the neologism of “crowdsourcing”.

Back in January 2009, a Wired journalist Jeff Howe contacted me to ask how is that I used the word “crowdsourcing” on flickr in February 2006, four months before he wrote an article introducing the concept? I had no idea what he was talking about or why this was getting him so agitated. He said I must have heard about the story through some backchannel.

So this made me curious. Where did the word come from?

So, I crowdsourced a bit of research. Lukas, founder of Dolores Labs a crowdsourcing startup, asked his virtual army on Mechanical Turk if they could find something that pre-dates my Feb 2006 mention. They came up with a number of references afterward and a clearly backdated forgery. As far as they could tell, this was the first one.

To check again, I am re-posting the relevant section of the flickr discussion group to see if anyone knows of a prior mention.

For those logged in to flickr, you can see the original thread directly.

9 responses to “First use of the word “Crowdsourcing”?”

  1. another flickr-fed example from 2009
    Obama Poster Child

    And another fun project Lukas did with IBM in 2008:

    Sensual Heat Map

  2. you have far too much time on your hands, can’t you cure cancer or something?

  3. You say Newton. I say Leibniz. Let’s call the whole thing off.

  4. congrats!
    i am thrilled to know someone who coined a very popular new term 🙂

  5. Steve, my (self-serving!) recollection is that I had seen Jeff’s article in draft months before it was published (I was then the editor of Wired) and used the word I’d just learned at a event you and I were speaking together at. Perhaps you heard it first there?

  6. Congratulations! Just when I thought you couldn’t get any more cool, this. 🙂

  7. neo99 – Assuming you are the Chris I know, that just might explain it (unlike the term "viral marketing’ which was a purposeful and memorable concoction, I have no recollection how or why the term "crowdsourcing" popped into my head). So, you used the term in a talk at a conference?

  8. I think it was a word that was waiting to be born, like "flash mob" from "lynch mob"… once you had "outsourcing" and people were talking about the "wisdom of crowds"… anyway it is a brilliant neologism that was much needed and is now ubiquitous. Very American too, like "Cheeseburger" when there is no such city as "Cheeseburg".

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