The biggest obstacle I see for you is to argue the novelty. Bots are not a new idea .
A convincing, turing-test-passing bot would be quite novel though!
I guess the angle to take here would be to suggest that a world-wide collaborative community of all sorts of (not necessarily acadamic) backgrounds has the potential to achieve things where smaller but more ‘professional’ groups fail.
AKA the ‘wikipedia’ versus ‘specialized encyclopedias’ approach. We all know which approach of those had the most impact by now… Can we pitch chatbots.org, and various initiatives (like Erwin’s recent transcript-focused one) as the ‘wikipedia of chatbots’?
Mind you, for knowledge databases this has been done before, most notoriously the MindPixel project before the owner of that took his own life. But for actually collaborating on all aspects, exchanging thoughts, code, data ... I can testify that this forum, in the brief period I have spent here, has already helped me tremendously - to improve my bot. There must be a case to make for ‘scaling up’ there. (though, as it stands, no way I am open-sourcing actual code )
Maybe said ‘central transcripts’ platform, with a bit of spicing up in terms of ‘research possibilities it opens’ etc etc, could be made the centerpiece of such a grant application? It sure would be unique and highly welcomed by many!