GLHF for Taiwan Students - Global Learning Hackathon Fund / Good Luck Have Fun

GLHF for Taiwan Students - Global Learning Hackathon Fund / Good Luck Have Fun

We facilitate Taiwanese students' participation in international hackathons to gain global tech exposure, mentorship, and career inspiration. Funded by donors, supported by mentors, with students giving back winnings.
Application
Applied on: 5 Aug 2024 04:03 AM
Round: Asia Round
Approved
User Review
AI Review
A1
Reviewed on 5 Aug 2024 05:00 AM
The Grant must be in support of or directly advance the Asian public goods ecosystem; or at least one founder identifies him/herself as Asian. We will refer to the [public goods report](https://www.gccofficial.org/explore.html#report) released by GCC last December for the definition of public goods.
The project aims to inspire and mentor the next generation of builders within the Asian ecosystem, specifically in Taiwan. Additionally, all founders identify themselves as Asian with significant community involvement.
The project must clearly articulate the problem it addresses, the solution, the implementation plan, the financial plan, and demonstrate there is an excellent team or community for execution.
The project description outlines the problem of limited exposure, mentorship, and career inspiration for Taiwanese students. The solution involves sending students to international hackathons, with a well-defined implementation and financial plan. The team includes experienced members with strong backgrounds in the ecosystem.
Project must be 3 months old and the project must demonstrate some tangible progress towards their stated goals, with a working MVP is available to the public. We will use Twitter, official website, github, and other public info to determine this. Newer projects should establish themselves and submit to the next round.
The project's Twitter and official website indicate ongoing activities and progress towards their goals, suggesting the initiative has been active for over 3 months.
Grantees can be eliminated from consideration in the round if they are found to be encouraging or enabling Sybil attacks or other forms of malicious manipulation of the grants platform or the Gitcoin community.
There is no available information or indication that suggests the project has encouraged or enabled Sybil attacks or other malicious activities. This criterion requires ongoing monitoring.
Projects must comply with Gitcoin core rules and [eligibility criteria](https://gov.gitcoin.co/t/gg21-community-round-eligibility-criteria/19003).
Based on the provided information, the project appears to comply with Gitcoin's core rules and eligibility criteria. There is no evidence of non-compliance.