• leetnewb@beehaw.org
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    1 year ago

    I did back of the envelope math a while back where if active users of large self-hosted communities (such as /r/selfhosted) put $5/month into donations to the most used self-hosted software projects, ~20 projects could get ~$75,000/year of income. Not enough to build a company around, but enough to live well on in many parts of the world as a sole developer or enough for a maintainer to pay for other developer contribution.

    I think the open source community fails to organize around the fact that development and maintenance isn't free, but that as a massive user group, it takes minimal contribution from each to make an impact. Can better messaging and "structure" break the free rider problem?

    • J Lou@mastodon.social
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      1 year ago

      What you are looking for is some sort of variant of quadratic funding. It is a mechanism that is specifically designed to overcome the free rider problem that public goods like FOSS suffer from. It solves it by matching private contributions to these public goods using a special formula that aligns incentives, so that everyone that knowingly benefits from a public good has an economic incentive to contribute to it because more contributors leads to a higher level of matching