there is likely low-hanging fruit for volunteers in charities or communities in the area of sustained tedious tasks; collecting anecdotes, reports, links, that sort of thing come to mind as LW examples
It seems like most of this can already be accomplished very cheaply by Mechanical Turk.
I'm sure, but from reading the Mechanical Turk literature (eg. my boss is a robot), you need really specific tasks and a framework for working through MT so you can do majority voting on submissions and that sort of thing.
I have a hard time thinking of things you would want to do that are mechanical enough to get good results out of Turk, and large-scale enough that you would recover all the overhead of using MT and the actual fees (to say nothing of learning how to use MT and your framework!).
The article resonated with me because a number of my own activi...
From the GiveWell blog, which is often interesting & applicable to our interests, comes a post on the quality of their volunteers:
(The dropout rate is probably not due to the perceived low utility of the work - GiveWell seems to be up-front that the test assignment is a test.)
I draw a few lessons from this: