The Internet collaboration model has always been the wave of Web 2.0 development. From wiki and open source communities, they have all continued and developed new realms of human teamwork and mutual assistance.
Recently, I've been paying attention to a website called Tucia (http://tucia.com/), which claims to be a human brain image processing engine, creating a new Internet collaboration model. Here, ordinary users can submit their photos that need processing along with their requirements for photo processing, and seek help from bakers (professional image processing technicians) to process them. Meanwhile, the bakers gain training experience and the satisfaction of helping others by assisting those users in need. The model can mainly be broken down as follows: Tucia provides the platform —> users submit their needs —> technicians choose the needs for collaboration. This creates a one-way Internet collaboration model. There is also YeeYan (http://www.yeeyan.com/), a site I occasionally visit to read articles, which is also an Internet collaboration model. Different users voluntarily contribute translations out of a spirit of dedication or helping others, adding their own efforts to the Chinese content on the Internet. And there was also the very popular crowdsourcing model some time ago. All these are conveying such information: the Internet collaboration model is taking root and developing innovative advancements in China.