Build on the Neighborhood Commons.
Tell us about your app. We'll send a verification code, issue your service key, and route a one-time operator review. Reads work immediately; writes activate when we approve — usually within a day.
What kinds of contributions fit — and what doesn't
Three shapes of contribution, all welcome:
- First-party publishing. You're building an app that lets people post things they run. "I'm building a tool where yoga teachers across Philly post their class schedules." The yoga teacher asserts their own offering via you.
- Proxying public information. You're collecting public facts that already exist on the open web. "I'm pulling event listings from venue websites across South Philly into a single feed." Public info is public; bringing it into the Commons makes it discoverable to every other app.
- Witnessing with evidence. You're capturing things observed in the world. "Users of my app photograph flyers they see on telephone poles, and I OCR them into structured events." The flyer is public; the evidence is the photo.
What's not permitted:
- Copyrighted text, photos, video, or audio you don't have rights to redistribute under CC BY 4.0. (You can link to it from a description, but the description itself must be yours or rights-cleared.)
- Personal information about individuals. The Commons holds zero PII by design. The entities you publish are organizations, venues, performers, classes — not individual private people.
- Content you haven't verified is real. Confidence isn't required; care is.
There's a market here, and quality matters. Consumer apps that read from the Commons filter what they surface. App A might only show events from first-party verified organizations. App B might show everything but visually mark unverified entries. App C might block-list contributors whose data is consistently wrong. If the information you contribute is sloppy or suspect, downstream apps will rightly filter it out — and you'll have done a disservice both to your own work and to the people you were trying to support. Conversely, accurate well-attributed contributions get picked up everywhere and compound your reach.
The two questions below are how we get a feel for the shape of what you're doing. Be plain and specific — there's no special phrasing we're listening for.