Similiar to distributed.net, seti@home now allows creation of competing teams http://setiathome.ssl.berkeley.edu/team.html , a distinctly motivating factor.
Current stats:
http://setiathome.ssl.berkeley.edu/stats/totals.html
Users
287675 Work units sent 771222 Results received 239930 Total CPU time 8023159 hr 53 min 06.4 sec ( 915.89 years)
33 hr 26 min 22.5 sec
The disparity between work units sent and results received indicates that the joins have not saturated yet. Somehow, I think the creators of the project have never anticipated such a resonance ;)
Though it is difficult to imagine a project more motivating to the public than SETI an ALife project akin to http://www.hip.atr.co.jp/~ray/tierra/netreport/netreport.html could come close, especially if providing stunning visuals.
As the rollout of xDSL continues, the local density of potential project participants connected with low-latency ~1 Mbps might become supercritical for really worthwhile projects. JITed Java performance is apparently at the threshold of becoming comparable to true compiled languages. Creating a distributed GA for the sake of finding a mutation function capable of mutating Java VM opcodes robustly would be obviously extremely worthile. Searches of integer 3d CA rule space would be that as well, and simultaneously guarantee a rich source of visuals.
Of course one could also think about writing a code GA searching for constructive IP stack buffer overruns, and applying just-discovered exploits immediately... >;)