Media and Content Development Project or Internship

Closed
Atsign
San Jose, California, United States
Denise Daniels
Head of Innovation & Partnerships
(6)
3
Project
Academic experience
40 hours per student
Student
Anywhere
Intermediate level

Project scope

Categories
Communications Product or service launch Marketing strategy
Skills
newsletters communication content development marketing visual assets zoom (video conferencing tool)
Details

Come co-create the alternative Human-First Internet with The @ Company.

Let’s build an Internet where People, not Big Tech, call the shots.

Our organization is able to offer a virtual internship opportunity for 8 students or teams.

Design & Production Intern (Remote) July 6- July 16

Depending on your interests, your responsibilities as a Design & Production Intern will include but not be limited to the following:

  • Create visual assets to be used on social media, our website, email newsletters, etc.
  • Sort through and edit our archive of recorded video content for our discussion series @talks.
  • Assist with different marketing campaigns, including app launches, campaigns around increased consumer awareness, and more.
  • Write an article on Design and Architecture to be featured on our Medium and Reddit.

We will plan to communicate with our virtual intern using these communication tools:

email: denise@atsign.com; discord, zoom, google chat

Please send a brief email to denise@atsign.com or call 650-868-3895 with your linkedin profile.

Deliverables
No deliverables exist for this project.
Mentorship

The @ Company provides a weekly Development Sprint and daily stand-ups, in additon, to 2-3 formal workshops per week.

About the company

Company
San Jose, California, United States
11 - 50 employees
Technology, It & computing

We are internet optimists. We believe in the internet and all it has to offer. And, we want to make the internet better. How? Well, tech luminaries Kevin Nickels and Colin Constable decided to go to the core. They developed an open-source technology at the protocol level. No more client-server thinking, no more authentication nightmares and walled gardens, no more entering the same data ad nauseam into a data center owned by somebody else. With the atProtocol and your personal atSign, you get your own keys to your own datadom, your own micro-server, and a world of people-first apps where you mix and match them using your atSign to seamlessly move around the internet without being surveilled. Does that sound optimistic, or what?