• d0ntpan1c
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    1 year ago

    So you want software developers to spend less time building the software so they can run a nonprofit too? Do you think all the conferences, sites, fundraising, marketing, extensive help docs, bug processing, and community engagement is all something that can just be done on the side?

    Just ask any software dev working st any of these foundations. They don’t want to do any of the business-side work. Or, if they do, they certainly don’t want to do it alone. If they were alone in it, they wouldn’t have time to write code.

      • d0ntpan1c
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        1 year ago

        Without those things open source would slowly die. All of those are about getting more users for products, getting funding to make them happen, but more importantly, inspiring the next group of contributors.

        Open source doesn’t just appear out of thin air. It costs money and time. People need to care about it.

        Without users, a project is just a hobby and unlikely to persist long term. Without funding, contributors are forced to abandon for jobs to out food on the table. Without the next group of contributors to pass the torch onto, projects die.

        • glad_cat@lemmy.sdf.org
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          1 year ago

          Linus Torvalds had a great Finnish shaman when he started. It reminds me that I must hire a psychic for my 10-years old projects that “would slowly die,” can’t “persist long term,” and “cost money” because I was “forced to abandon [my] job.”

          Ooops too late, my projects are dead.

      • tal@lemmy.today
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        1 year ago

        So, let’s go big picture here. Let’s get away from the specifics. Let’s even assume that she’s a bad person to put in place, or that her office is unnecessary.

        I’m not donating money to the GNOME Foundation. It’s not my money at stake. Unless you’re a donor, it’s not your money at stake.

        I’m not familiar with the GNOME Foundation, but I can tell you right now that it doesn’t get exclusive control of GNOME. They don’t hold IP rights over GNOME software. If people and companies don’t like where they’re going, they can ignore them.

        I think that it was Linus Torvalds who once pointed out that his only authority derives from the fact that people generally felt that he was doing a good job, and if that changed, he wouldn’t have that authority.

        Even if they fund work on a project, you want to fork an open-source project, you can fork it. Wouldn’t be the first time that a fork has supplanted a parent project.