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Open Source Businesses Microsoft Software The Almighty Buck

GitHub Launches Sponsors, Lets You Pay Your Favorite Open-Source Contributors (techcrunch.com) 85

GitHub today launched Sponsors, a new tool that lets you give financial support to open-source developers through recurring monthly payments. Developers will be able to opt into having a "Sponsor me" button on their GitHub repositories and open-source projects will also be able to highlight their funding models, no matter whether that's individual contributions to developers or using Patreon, Tidelift, Ko-fi or Open Collective. TechCrunch reports: The mission here, GitHub says, is to "expand the opportunities to participate in and build on open source." That's likely to be a bit controversial among some open-source developers who don't want financial interests to influence what people will work on. And there may be some truth to that as this may drive open-source developers to focus on projects that are more likely to attract financial contributions over more esoteric projects that are interesting and challenging but aren't likely to find financial backers on GitHub.

The program is only open to open-source developers. During the first year of a developer's participation, GitHub (and by extension, its corporate overlords at Microsoft) will also match up to $5,000 in contributions. For the next 12 months, GitHub won't charge any payment processing fees either (though it will do so after this time is over). GitHub tells me that developers will be able to set up multiple sponsorship tiers with benefits that can be set by the developer, too. In many ways, then, this isn't all that different from sponsoring a Twitch streamer, for example, with monthly payments and special benefits depending on how much you pay.

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GitHub Launches Sponsors, Lets You Pay Your Favorite Open-Source Contributors

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  • by Anonymous Coward

    I'd love to send payments to developers without sending payments to Microsoft (I'm sure they skim a percentage so now they have found a way to monotize OpenSource projects for themselves).

    • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday May 23, 2019 @09:49PM (#58645514)

      From the announcement (https://github.blog/2019-05-23-announcing-github-sponsors-a-new-way-to-contribute-to-open-source/):

      "As a thank you for these valuable contributions, GitHub Sponsors charges zero platform fees when you support the work of other developers. We’ll also cover payment processing fees for the first 12 months of the program to celebrate the launch. 100% percent of your sponsorship goes to the developer."

    • by darkain ( 749283 ) on Thursday May 23, 2019 @09:55PM (#58645520) Homepage

      You don't even need to send payments through GitHub. The platform supports OTHER payment systems as well like Patreon and Ko-fi integration. So, no, you don't need to worry about Microsoft in this one either (like all the other MS fud since they purchased GitHub)

      • by Tom ( 822 )

        Name something that didn't go south after it was acquired by Microsoft.

        Sure it may take time, but fool me once...

        • Skype still works fine on Linux. We use it for international calls. Cheap. Works.

  • So I can put "Hello world" on Github, add a "sponsor me" button, donate $5k to myself and get $10k in return?

    • Also, you can put up a "hello world", and then 'sponsor' $5000 of dirty drug money, and receive $5000 'clean' money, plus $5000 from microsoft, which let's be honest, wasn't exactly earned entirely honourably (and in some cases, not even legally).

  • I'd much rather see bounties attached to bugfixes and feature requests, maybe structured in a Kickstarter-like manner so when the dev gets $X pledged for a certain feature, he/she promises to implement it within a certain amount of time.

    Always wondered why no one has set this up yet. I feel like if we had such a system set up 15 years ago, at the very least we'd probably have a decent GUI file manager by now.
    • Such a thing does sort of exist, Bountysource:

      https://www.bountysource.com/teams/duplicati/issues

      here's the page for one of the projects that I use, for example. It's linked to github.

      • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

        The rates seem incredibly low on that site.

        $110 for "remote management", which is a huge project. Centralized management system, with security, admin/client accounts etc. If they paid a professional developer it would cost them about 1000x that much to get a basic version 1.0 running.

        That's the basic problem with all these tipping systems. They are okay for minor things that you can wrap up in an hour or two, but not "quit your job and work on it for 6 months" features that people really want.

        • That's why I said a Kickstarter-like system. Something beyond tipping. Pooled contributions, ideally in escrow so the dev has to actually finish implementing the feature in order to claim the money. With rules in place that partial completion (e.g. if unforeseen snags are hit) still allows the dev to claim some of the money, with the rest given as a partial refund and the source code is open so someone else could maybe finish the job eventually.

          Given how productive a motivated and competent programmer ca
  • It would be really good if they would support an internet-native currency that has smaller processing fees. I guess with Bitcoin money can't be pulled from your wallet each month though...
  • by lkcl ( 517947 ) <lkcl@lkcl.net> on Friday May 24, 2019 @02:33AM (#58646072) Homepage

    i've written about this before. libre developers are excluded from participating, and therefore excluded from receiving sponsorship. the reason is very simple: github is a non-free "Service as a Software Substitute" https://www.gnu.org/philosophy... [gnu.org]

    if you are a libre developer, it is therefore extremely hypocritical to be utilising a proprietary non-free service to even *develop* libre software. consequently, it may be viewed as being an out-and-out betrayal of the ethical principles on which software libre is founded.

    as an indirect result of this, no libre developer may receive the sponsorship funding that is being offered, because the funding is conditional on signing up to a non-free proprietary service, in the process destroying that developers' chances of ever being trusted by the wider libre software community to stand up for ethcal principles.

    interestingly, likewise, no libre developer may be a mentor of, or be a recipient of Google SoC sponsorship, for similar reasons: google forcibly demands "real names" for participation in GSoC (which is an incredibly dangerous precedent that i've also spoken about in the past).

    so that's not one but *two* very large corporations engaging in questionable tactics that serve *their* interests rather than those of the software libre community - the same software libre community that created the very software on which their massive profits are based.

    • How is this different from getting paid by a company? Or in the case of Google SoC, assignment of copyright (via a real name) to the FSF for libre (?) software contributions?

    • This is a great example of why, while I value lots of libre software, I do not subscribe to the Free Software Movement philosophy.

      I value Freedom, not Freedom(TM)(R)(C)(L). I don't give a rats ass about all these pushy exceptions to Freedom that the Free Software Movement insists are righteous. I agree they're free to do things that way, I just don't agree that insisting on the details of what other people do actually counts as respecting or supporting their Freedom.

      That's why, if I'm using a software tool,

  • by sad_ ( 7868 )

    for OSS projects on github this should not be opt-in but opt-out.
    by default the project gets the button and anybody who wants to give a thank you in the way of money should be able to do so easily, probably the only way a lot of people can and know how to contribute to the project.
    the opt-out button should allow the option of having the 'donations' go to charity or to be fully disabled.

  • Why would I pay these people anything when I can torrent what I want? If I'm not paying Microsoft, Adobe, et al, why would I pay these people? Everything is free for the taking. No one deserves to make money off of their work.

  • by Bengie ( 1121981 ) on Friday May 24, 2019 @07:07AM (#58646808)
    Matched contributions? I think it's time to sponsor myself.
    • The whole program will probably turn out to be an AI-driven fraud-detection API, but the government wouldn't buy it without a real-world test.

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