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Felix Urbasik

I started regularly donating about a year ago. I am now supporting 8 different projects with 20,77€ per month, and it didn't hurt at all.

Why pay for something free? Because free software only exists because other people already paid for it. Someone has to do it. It's time to do your part!

If you can afford a subscription service, then you probably can afford a little donation, too. Start with 0.1% of your income.

Check out @Liberapay or @opencollective

#FOSS #OpenSource #FreeSoftware #Linux

A social media post image with the headline:
Are you paying monthly for some of these?
Followed by the logos of Disney+, Netflix, Amazon Prime Video, Spotify and Discord.
Then, another headline:
Consider donating to some of these:
Followed by the logos of: Debian, XFCE, KDE, GNOME, postmarketOS, Inkscape, Pixelfed, Mastodon, F-Droid, GIMP, Arch Linux, Linux Mint, Liberapay, Matrix, Syncthing and PeerTube.
There is also a remark at the bottom of the image: Disagree with my selection of projects? Make your own version of this graphic by editing the original from https://furbasik.de/consider-donating.svg
43 comments
Melissa

@fell @Liberapay @opencollective and also, as you boycott AMZN etc, libraries are amazing! Libby app for Overdrive, Hoopla for movies and more, databases for free access to magazine and newspaper articles...
Also:
Libro.fm instead of Audible
Plus:
Betterworldbooks.com and bookshop.org

a fish named dog

@mtechman @fell @Liberapay @opencollective I've said it before and I'll say it again - while libraries are amazing, Libby and ebooks are 100 percent NOT. This is from a post by the Carnegie Library of Pittsburgh explaining why they need to halve the number of loans you are allowed to have: carnegielibrary.org/libby-hoop

A graphic of how much the book The Women, by Kristin Hannah, costs for consumers versus libraries. The print version costs $18.77 for consumers and $16.50 for libraries (it's unspecified if that's for paperback or hardcover). The audiobook costs $32.99 for consumers, and $60.00 for libraries (!). The ebook costs $14.99 for consumers and $60.00 for libraries (!!).
Melissa

@FishNamedDog @fell @Liberapay @opencollective good for them for explaining the costs...it's a huge problem

Joe Ortiz

@mtechman @FishNamedDog @fell @Liberapay @opencollective Also please read this from. @karawynn on why Libby/Overdrive, now owned by private equity firm KKR is poised to fuck libraries. Hell, they're already have.

ninelives.karawynnlong.com/the

Melissa

@joeo10 @FishNamedDog @fell @Liberapay @opencollective @karawynn Yup...complicated and a problem, and libraries have no choice but to deal with them.

Joe Ortiz

@mtechman @FishNamedDog @fell @Liberapay @opencollective @karawynn And with the Internet Archive ever closer to death's door (I already resigned to the inevitably, check my pinned thread especially the most recent ones) l, it will get worse so a good piece.

Martijn 🇪🇺🇳🇱

@fell @Liberapay @opencollective And for the love of god, please don't just donate to the big names in Open Source!

Sure they can use the money, but so can that lone developer of that small project that makes your life just a little better.

So if you're using a smaller open source project that you like, check if they have an option to support them financially.

Felix Urbasik

@chaosmonkey Absolutely! I used well known logos for social media purposes, but aiming for the smaller projects in need is key.

Everybody's got their niche, what's yours? Think about it and support the small projects that saved your day!

bytebro

@fell

This is true. Back when I used to free-lance I earned very good money, by my standards, and did very little with it other than having an Amex statement which was basically a Good Eating Guide. These days I'm gettin old, have a permie gig, and I chip in perhaps a total of around £50/mth to things like my Masto admin, some YouTube science channels, FOSS projects, and the occasional Kickstarter project. It brings me joy to be able to do that.

@Liberapay @opencollective

DELETED

@fell what if. i don't pay for ANYTHING? (no, big corps neither. nothing as nothing. and without ability to give anything)

Felix Urbasik

@hacknorris If you have nothing to give then you have nothing to give. That's okay.

arutaz

@fell @Liberapay @opencollective
I'm donating a lot too.
Nothing is ever really free, it costs both money and time to develop software.
Pay what you can. Sometimes in life you can pay more, somtimes less. It's all ok.

Kevin Karhan :verified:

@fell @Liberapay @opencollective I'd rather pay for #FLOSS than pay for a #Subscription that'll get constantly enshittified, espechally when half of them ain't available in my juristiction and/or not without a credit card!!!

Kevin Karhan :verified:

@fell @Liberapay @opencollective also considering how the main Server & Client for #Matrix is "asshole-licensed" under #AGPLv3 I'd rather setup @zulip & @jitsimeetinstances / #JitsiMeet.

GhostOnTheHalfShell

@fell @Liberapay @opencollective

I want to also suggest looking into Nebula or Means tv streaming platforms.

I know that the former is creator owned

@notjustbikes

is one such creator.

publiclewdness
So very true. The amount I donate can change each week but I try to donate every week to worthy projects.
a fish named dog

@fell @Liberapay @opencollective and the internet archive, which as we've all just learned is rather short-staffed!

ity

@fell

Why donate to Matrix (they'll kill me for saying this won't they)

They are a for-profit company currently.

ity

@hexmasteen @fell Yes, but the Matrix foundation is just a non-profit organization front for the for-profit New Vector Limited & Element Software companies. It *technically* owns the protocol but *practically* all of its members are Element employees, so in reality Matrix bends to Element as they are two different names for the same thing.

Hex

@ity @fell The foundation will be more independent and powerful if it gets more donations.

And afaik Element the company didn't produce any profit yet. They are trying out ways to become financially sustainable and I whish them all the best.

(I'm not affiliated but seemingly a fanboy. ^^)

ity

@hexmasteen @fell that is a possibility, but we wouldn't believe in it as it kinda hinges on the CEO's decisions.

As far as we know yes, they aren't profitable currently.

We are also not affiliated but we worked on some matrix software (mostly around E2EE, UX, and spec compliance) & did some work with the specification.

Felix Urbasik

@ity @hexmasteen Instead of the Matrix Foundation, I probably should've included various independent client and server projects. Despite rumours that the specification is often modeled after the implementation in Element/Synapse and the high difficulty of actually making alternative client/server implementations apart from Element/Synapse, it is certainly possible. I think supporting Matrix as a whole benefits the entire open source community and will lead us to a finished protocol. Eventually.

ity

@fell @hexmasteen

Many independent client devs are quitting (us included). Independent server devs are getting closer and closer to burnout.

And yes, it is possible. You will just have to fight the Matrix team at every turn whenever you wanna fix or improve anything in the spec, and we get tired of spending incomparably more time on dealing with corporate bikeshedding than on actual development work.

But ye, including independent clients & servers would've been much better :)

DELETED

@fell @Liberapay @opencollective sadly pixelfed is nearly abandoned since it's creator started working on loop, some app components are on V1 when other have a theme V3, it's a mess and it's sad as I expected to use it when it would be fixed....

dansup

@girlintech @fell @Liberapay @opencollective This isn’t true, just merged some code yesterday!

Pixelfed is still actively maintained, check the git history lol

patricus

@fell @Liberapay @opencollective I don't donate to any of these, but I'll start to donate to NV access and maybe, maybe to mastodon if they fix their bs and make the web app actually good to use with a screenreader.

Felix Urbasik

There are so many projects I forgot to include in this graphic! There are also @Blender, @Kodi, @gotosocial and @godotengine only to name a few. Although I haven't checked if all of them accept donations. Maybe I'll make an updated version of the graphic soon.

Json Doh

Also, for most in the US donations up to about a 0.5% of their income is completely tax deductable with no documentation required

@fell @Liberapay @opencollective

Felix Urbasik

@jdoe @Liberapay @opencollective That's good to know! I don't know the legal situation in the US, but where I live that only applies to donations to properly registered non-profit organisations. I know KDE is one, at least here, and Mastodon, too.

Doc :godot:

@fell somewhat adjacent to this topic, but do you have any knowledge on a recommended crowdfunding platform?

Felix Urbasik

@DoctorBLLK Unfortunately I do not. I wish there was a crowdfunding platform with a focus on openness and transparency like Liberapay and Open Collective. However, while neither of them is really set up for crowdfunding with things like stretch goals and such, they could be used in such a way. Open Collective can collect money for a cause and Liberapay has a way of promising a certain sum. Although, unlike most crowdfunding platforms, there is no protection or refund if a project fails.

Doc :godot:

@fell hmm, I guess that's part of the cost of using the existing platforms. At least a little bit of security. Thanks, and great notes on the original post, very important.

ikt 🇺🇦

@fell @Liberapay @opencollective I would but at the moment I donate to andysplace.org.au/ which provides food for the homeless and savelife.in.ua/en/ which helps Ukraine fight Russia.

To think if house prices weren't absurd and Russia didn't invade Ukraine I could be donating to a lot of other places instead.

darkdragon

@fell @Liberapay @opencollective The biggest problem with small donations is comparatively big transaction costs: github.com/opencollective/open
Credit card companies benefit the most out of open source donations.
It's a mystery to me why this issue isn't solved yet as the benefit is huge. As stated in the comments this would have saved about $30,000 (if the transactions didn't grow since 2019) in Stripe fees for 2-5 days of work if this feature was implemented when the bug was opened.

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