-
US TV star details 'agony' over mother's disappearance
-
Tehran receives US plan to end Mideast war, as Iran fires at US carrier
-
Aviation, tourism, agriculture... the economic sectors hit by the war
-
Iran fires at US carrier as backchannel diplomacy aims to end war
-
Salah's long goodbye brings curtain down on golden era for Liverpool
-
Monaco: city of vice and a few virtues
-
AI making cyber attacks costlier and more effective: Munich Re
-
Defying Israeli bombs, Lebanese hold out in southern city of Tyre
-
War-linked power crunch pushes Sri Lanka to four-day week
-
Hungary says will phase out gas deliveries to Ukraine
-
Oil prices tumble, stocks rally on Mideast peace hopes
-
Maybach: Between Glory and a Turning Point
-
German business morale falls as war puts recovery on ice: survey
-
Labubu maker Pop Mart's shares fall 23% despite surging earnings
-
ECB won't be 'paralysed' in face of energy shock: Lagarde
-
Iran hits targets across Middle East after Trump signals talks progress
-
McEvoy says best is to come after breaking long-standing swim record
-
Goat vs gecko: A tiny Caribbean island faces wildlife showdown
-
Japan PM asks IEA chief to prepare additional 'coordinated release' of oil
-
Hungary's hard-pressed LGBTQ people say Orban exit is only half battle
-
Belarus leader visits North Korea for first time
-
'No heavier burden': the decades-long search for Kosovo war missing
-
Exotic pet trade thrives in China despite welfare concerns
-
Iran fires missile salvo after Trump signals progress in talks
-
BTS concert drew 18.4 million viewers, says Netflix
-
OSCE's 'chaotic' Ukraine evacuation put staff at risk: leaked report
-
Top WTO official sounds fertiliser warning over Middle East war
-
France and Brazil weigh up World Cup prospects in glamour friendly
-
Italy hoping to end World Cup pain as play-offs loom
-
Dirty diapers born again in Japan recycling breakthrough
-
Verstappen's Japan GP win streak under threat as Mercedes dominate
-
Crude tumbles, stocks rally on hopes for Iran war de-escalation
-
Gauff outlasts Bencic to reach Miami semi-finals
-
'Hero' Australian dog who saved 100 koalas retires
-
Underdogs chase World Cup berths in Mexico playoff tournament
-
Pope heads to tiny Catholic Monaco
-
Meet the four astronauts set to voyage around the Moon
-
Artemis 2 Moon mission: a primer
-
It's go time: historic Moon mission set for lift-off
-
Denmark's PM Mette Frederiksen, tenacious and tough on migration
-
OpenAI kills Sora video app in pivot toward business tools
-
Danish PM's left-wing bloc wins election, but no majority
-
Lithium Measurement MR-Technology Provider NanoNord Expands Business with DLE Leader ElectraLith, Following Danish State Visit to Australia
-
Rancho BioSciences Appoints Chris O'Brien as CEO to Deliver AI-Ready Data Solutions for Faster, More Reliable R&D
-
Datavault AI Partners with Rising British Heavyweight Moses Itauma
-
Brazil court grants house arrest for jailed Bolsonaro
-
Sinner downs Michelsen to reach Miami Open quarter-finals
-
Advantage Arsenal in women's Champions League quarter-final against Chelsea
-
Garner dreams of World Cup glory in bid to replicate England under-21 success
-
New Mexico jury finds Meta liable for endangering children
From NASA to Your Boardroom: Freelancer Opens 85-Million-Mind Innovation Engine to All Enterprises
The platform that slashed NASA's R&D costs and compressed three-day computations into one hour is now available to any organisation
Previous challenge winner's spacecraft solution is bound for space
What do you do when your toughest technical problem stumps every expert in your building? If you're NASA, you throw it open to 85 million minds across 140 countries. Starting today, any company can do the same.
SAN FRANCISCO, CA / ACCESS Newswire / January 23, 2026 / Freelancer (ASX:FLN) announced the global launch of its Moonshot Innovation Program, opening the breakthrough platform that has delivered over 20,000 solutions to NASA, NIH, and the CDC to enterprises worldwide.
The same system that helped NASA save 80-99% on R&D costs, compressed Bureau of Reclamation river modelling from 72 hours to 60 minutes, and generated 54 genome therapy breakthroughs for NIH is now available to any organization with a problem that traditional consulting can't crack.

The results speak louder than any pitch deck.
NASA's spacecraft tank venting challenge attracted 47 solutions from physicists, chemists, and aerospace engineers across multiple continents. The National Institutes of Health's $6 million gene therapy challenge pulled in teams from Harvard, MIT, Stanford, Yale, and biotech startups, delivering 30 winning approaches in the first phase alone. The U.S. Bureau of Reclamation achieved a 60x performance improvement through an algorithm designed by someone outside traditional water management circles.
"We've proven something radical," said Matt Barrie, Chief Executive of Freelancer. "The person who can solve your impossible problem might be anywhere on Earth. They might be working in a completely different industry. They might approach it from an angle your team would never consider."
The 'Innovation Arbitrage'
McKinsey research shows 87% of executives report critical skills gaps in emerging technologies. Meanwhile, Freelancer's government clients have been quietly running a different playbook. They're not hiring consultants to give them answers their own teams could produce. They're tapping statistical diversity at scale.
"The currency for problem-solving and finding innovation is diversity," said Steve Rader, former Program Manager at NASA's Tournament Lab. "If you could have solved it within your domain, you would have solved it already. As soon as the speed of change is faster than your company is able to change, there is an expiration date on your company."
The platform has processed challenges across computational fluid dynamics, genome editing, spacecraft engineering, network science, emergency response systems, and data privacy. Winners have included professors from Carthage College, retired MIT engineers, heads of chemistry at aerospace startups, and self-taught innovators who discovered unexpected talents through competition.
How It Works
Unlike traditional R&D where you pay for effort regardless of outcome, innovation challenges only pay for results. Freelancer's team deconstructs complex problems into solvable components, designs challenges that attract the right global talent, curates responses, and manages IP transfer. Organizations choose how open to make their challenges - global, country-specific, or university-focused.
"You're not choosing one consulting firm where everyone sits in a room and comes up with the same solution," said Trisha Epp, Director of Innovation at Freelancer. "You're having a competition where lots of people come up with their own divergent solutions. They each have a different, unique idea. They're not influenced by each other."
Recent challenges demonstrate the range. The National Institute of Standards and Technology invested $1 million in emergency response command systems integrating VR, AR, and LiDAR. NIH committed $6 million over five years to crack targeted gene therapy delivery. The Department of Commerce ran a three-year, $975K program for data privacy certification systems that reached 14 million people globally.
The Track Record
Since 2015, Freelancer has delivered:
20,215 breakthrough solutions
8,783 participating innovators
Challenges across 140 countries
Winners from Harvard, MIT, Yale, Tesla, IBM
Up to 40x return on investment vs. traditional grant programs
NASA cost savings of 80-99% vs conventional methods
The success rate led NASA to expand Freelancer's contract from $25 million over five years (NOIS2) to $475 million over 10 years (NOIS3) - a 600% increase.
"As someone who leads solutioning at the intersection of digital engineering and data-driven analytics, the breadth of solutions, and varied nature of approach, received during this challenge was inspiring," said Brian Tonge, VP Enterprise Operations at LMI.
"This prize competition has been a great success to Reclamation - exceeding our set goals," said Yong G. Lai, Ph.D., U.S. Bureau of Reclamation.
Life-Changing Successes

Winners of past challenges -when Moonshot was limited to select enterprises - have enjoyed incredible benefits. Solutions have been adopted by major aerospace contractors, spun into commercial products, advanced to spaceflight, and secured additional R&D funding.
"The most valuable outcome was validation of product strategy," said Suzanne Borders, founder of BadVR, a woman-owned small business that won the $1 million CommanDING Tech challenge. "The hardest part of a startup isn't the actual engineering, it's knowing what to build and when to build it. The challenge was instrumental." BadVR has since secured additional government R&D funding and turned their idea into a product for commercial and defense sectors.
Samer Hanoudi, an Assistant Professor at Davenport University who won NASA's Aftershock challenge, said: "Winning this NASA challenge has significantly boosted my professional confidence and credibility, opening new opportunities for collaborations in aerospace and advanced engineering fields."
One challenge winner's spacecraft refueling solution is now advancing to spaceflight through partnerships with Kennedy Space Center and Johnson Space Center, demonstrating the platform's ability to deliver not just theoretical solutions but flight-ready technology.
The Competitive Reality
This isn't about outsourcing. It's about what happens when the world's brightest minds compete to solve problems that keep your executives up at night. When NASA needed lunar navigation systems, they got shadow compasses, star analog navigation tools, and modular rover designs. When they needed to detect small space debris, they got plasma signature tracking, CubeSat fleets, and a rotating tethered sweeper dubbed "SPACE BAT."
In an era where competitive advantage is measured in months rather than years, the question isn't whether to embrace open innovation. It's whether you'll do it before your competitors.
Organizations ready to solve their impossible problems can visit www.freelancer.com/innovation-challenges or contact Trisha Epp, Director of Innovation, at [email protected]
First Challenge on New Open Platform
The first challenge for the new open version of the Moonshot Innovation Program will be "Restore Your Corner" - a $10,000 global ecosystem restoration challenge.
The challenge invites individuals and communities to document native habitat restoration efforts through video - from removing invasive species to planting native vegetation.
Prizes include regional winners and a People's Choice Award, while creating an open-source library of restoration techniques adapted to diverse ecosystems worldwide.
The challenge - which goes live in the coming weeks - demonstrates that the platform is open to both enterprises posting technical challenges and public participation initiatives.
"Whether it's a Fortune 500 company posting a $5 million computational challenge or a community documenting ecosystem restoration, the platform works the same way," said Trisha Epp, Director of Innovation at Freelancer. "'Restore Your Corner' proves anyone can participate."
For more information, contact:
Moonshot Inquiries:
Trisha Epp
Director of Innovation, Moonshot Innovation, Freelancer
[email protected]
Media Inquiries:
Brent O'Halloran
Director of Communications
[email protected] | +1 (650) 442 3334
About Freelancer
Thirteen-time Webby award-winning Freelancer is the world's largest freelancing and crowdsourcing marketplace by total number of users and projects posted. More than 80 million registered users have posted over 25 million projects and contests to date in over 3,000 areas as diverse as website development, logo design, marketing, copywriting, astrophysics, aerospace engineering and manufacturing. Freelancer owns Escrow.com, the leading provider of secure online payments and online transaction management for consumers and businesses on the Internet with over US$8 billion in transactions secured. Freelancer also owns Loadshift, Australia's largest heavy haulage freight marketplace with over 800 million kilometres of freight posted since inception. Freelancer Limited is listed on the Australian Securities Exchange under the ticker ASX:FLN and in the United States as FRLCY.
SOURCE: Freelancer
View the original press release on ACCESS Newswire
O.Salvador--PC