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Open Source Google HP IBM Intel Red Hat Software SuSE The Almighty Buck

Big Names Dominate Open Source Funding 32

jones_supa writes: Network World's analysis of publicly listed sponsors of 36 prominent open-source non-profits and foundations reveals that the lion's share of financial support for open-source groups comes from a familiar set of names. Google was the biggest supporter, appearing on the sponsor lists of eight of the 36 groups analyzed. Four companies – Canonical, SUSE, HP and VMware – supported five groups each, and seven others (Nokia, Oracle, Cisco, IBM, Dell, Intel and NEC) supported four. For its part, Red Hat supports three groups (Linux Foundation, Creative Commons and the Open Virtualization Alliance).

It's tough to get more than a general sense of how much money gets contributed to which foundations by which companies – however, the numbers aren't large by the standards of the big contributors. The average annual revenue for the open-source organizations considered in the analysis was $4.36 million, and that number was skewed by the $27 million taken in by the Wikimedia Foundation (whose interests range far beyond OSS development) and the $17 million posted by Linux Foundation.
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Big Names Dominate Open Source Funding

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  • I'm assuming that's original Nokia and not the cut-off body part that had been assimilated.

    • Microsoft participates in FOSS a lot more than you may realize. For instance, Microsoft is a member of the GNOME foundation
      • I definitely did not ask about Microsoft.

      • Re:Nokia? (Score:5, Funny)

        by Anonymous Coward on Saturday January 10, 2015 @06:37PM (#48783147)

        For instance, Microsoft is a member of the GNOME foundation

        That certainly explains GNOME Shell.

      • Microsoft participates in FOSS a lot more than you may realize. For instance, Microsoft is a member of the GNOME foundation

        Based on their absence from the top 36, Microsoft participates less than you realize.

      • by rtb61 ( 674572 )

        It seems everyone who benefits from FOSS participates in how ever many small ways even M$. So why aren't governments participating more. They give away money to the likes of M$ billions upon billions of dollars whilst also using FOSS software but give nothing to FOSS, whilst give billions to M$ for exactly the same thing, something seems mighty crooked in that.

        Where are the government funded and maintained facilities for the FOSS projects they make use of, just to be fair, just to match dollar for dollar

  • by NoNonAlphaCharsHere ( 2201864 ) on Saturday January 10, 2015 @04:21PM (#48782645)
    Concentrating on the money these big corporations give to Open Source foundations and ignoring the salaries they pay to dedicated Open Source developers is a ridiculous comparison -- a drop in a bucket.
    • by unixisc ( 2429386 ) on Saturday January 10, 2015 @05:14PM (#48782831)
      Not just that, also the software that they donate to Open Source. This one is a symbiotic effect, as those companies tend to benefit from the Community work done on it. Like Juniper or Apple feeding back their changes upstream to FreeBSD and other such projects.
    • That's right. Me, for example. My job is to maintain and improve some software my employer uses, and help others in the organization learn to use it. Since the software system is open source, all of my bug fixes and many of the improvements I do are sent back upstream. (Some aren't generally purpose, but are specific to my employer and their needs.)

  • by Great Big Bird ( 1751616 ) on Saturday January 10, 2015 @04:33PM (#48782699)
    You mean to say that the people with the most money are the ones donating the most to fund open source development?
  • Use the median (Score:4, Informative)

    by wiredlogic ( 135348 ) on Saturday January 10, 2015 @05:10PM (#48782817)

    The average annual revenue for the open-source organizations considered in the analysis was $4.36 million, and that number was skewed by the $27 million taken in by the Wikimedia Foundation

    Then compute the median. That's standard practice if an outlier disrupts the mean. It's not like this is rocket science.

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