Condell's first video, uploaded to YouTube on 8 February 2007 was his participation in The Blasphemy Challenge, an Internet-based project which aims to get atheists declare themselves.
Derrick Smith, a computer scientist in the Netherlands, has invited anyone with a computer to join in an Internet-based project that runs computer simulations of how immune systems react to flu infections and vaccinations.
A radically transparent approach has been implemented in many free and open source software projects, as well as many other Internet-based collaborative projects.
In December 2006, the atheist organization Rational Response Squad announced it would give free DVDs of the film to the first 1,001 people who participated in the Blasphemy Challenge, an Internet-based project encouraging atheists to declare themselves publicly.
Piotr Waglowski specialised in the legal aspects of the information society and the legal analysis of the Internet-based projects.
In more recent years, the CPB has started funding some Internet-based projects.
The Blasphemy Challenge, started in December 2006, is an Internet-based project which aims to get atheists to come out and declare themselves as atheists.
After producing Internet-based projects and television spots, the series became Animation Collective's first television series.