I know, I'm sorry. And then my brain cells were all distracted trying to figure out how to use the video-conferencing equipment.
So one of the key denouements.... You see, I build up a lot of suspense this way. The answer was that a lot of people are participating because they feel they will be recognized in the marketplace and be able to potentially get hired. They'll get a job as a result of showing what they know about a particular patent. So if there's a patent on battery storage or hard drives or whatever it may be and they can demonstrate that they have some know-how in that space, particularly a lot of students and younger people who are participating, they may get hired by the person whose application they were reviewing. Or they'll become known within that community of practice as being somebody knowledgeable.
So there are potentially real economic motivators to participating. As the archivist alluded to when Dave, Bob, and Andy did their work of developing the prototype for the Federal Register in response to the prize, I think what you see that's happened is they have become extremely popular and famous now as Dave, Bob, and Andy who have built the Federal Register. You're seeing more people like that.
There's a fellow from somewhere in New Jersey who posted something to a government forum, and that's how Health and Human Services found him and tapped him to build the new healthcare.gov site. He was an innovator, a sole entrepreneur, the type of person who never does business with the federal government.
The company that built challenge.gov for the federal government won the RFP to do that. It was a company of maybe two people when they won the RFP, and now they have a dozen people who work for them. The RFP that the government put out was a no-cost contract. The federal government didn't pay them to build challenge.gov. They wanted to do it because now they are known as the go-to people for knowing something about challenges and how to build these sites and they're getting hired by other people.
On the point you asked me earlier--is this a transitional phase, and will that always be the case over time--I think you're right, we'll see that this sort of ecosystem of open government data and innovations and jobs that are created by this will have a sort of good run, but I think we're just at the beginning of it. I can't yet see the end of it in sight, but I'm sure you're right, that over time the balance between what people are willing to do and what they want to get paid to do will change, which is why I think it's really important to keep reminding ourselves that this is ultimately about democracy and not just about business. It's about doing well by doing good, to keep getting people out there to clean up their local park or participate on patents or whatever it may be. We're ultimately doing it for a sense of belonging, and I think that is a sustainable motivation. But I think there's a lot of economic value to be extracted that we're just at the beginning of.