Colin Percival recently wrote this blog post. With his permission, it is republished here as it may be of interest to other Foundation supporters.
Whether you celebrate Christmas, Hanukkah, Yule, Pancha Ganapati,
Hogmanay, Newtonmas, or simply the end of the Gregorian year, odds
are that you're giving gifts some time around now. We give gifts
to family; we give gifts to friends; we donate to charities; and
many people also offer up tithes to religious institutions. Gifts
to individuals are a social bonding ritual — the voluntary
transfer of wealth signals a lower bound on the value we place on a
relationship, and the giving of non-monetary gifts in particular can
be a way to
communicate
our level of personal understanding — but these do not
apply to charitable and religious donations. For those, I think an
entirely different explanation is required: We pay voluntary taxes
in order to help create the world we want to live in.
This also applies to companies. I run an
online backup service, and
for the past two years I've donated all of the profits made during
the month of December to the
FreeBSD Foundation;
I'm going to be doing the same thing this year too. I'm not doing
this just because I'm a FreeBSD developer, because I use FreeBSD
personally, or because I would never have launched Tarsnap if I
hadn't been able to build on the open source code in FreeBSD: I'm
doing it because I think supporting FreeBSD development will make the
world a better place for both Tarsnap and many other startup companies.
I'm not alone in believing in corporate support of open source software,
either. NetApp and
Hudson River Trading,
both major FreeBSD users, have each made donations of $50,000 or
more in each of the past 3 years, and
many
other
companies
regularly
donate. Some open source software
organizations have
much longer lists
of major donors. And last year Gabriel Weinberg
launched
a FOSS Tithing movement by pledging that
DuckDuckGo would tithe in support
of open source software every year.
Most internet startup companies today would never exist without open
source software. As Paul Graham
has noted, open
source software is one of the big reasons why it's now possible to launch
a startup with just $20k and a few months of coding; with high quality free
operating systems, databases and datastores, application frameworks, web
servers and caches, it's now easy to build companies which would have
been nearly impossible a decade ago.
It would be easy to say that startup companies should contribute back to
open source projects out of simple gratitude, but I know it can be hard
to justify making business decisions on that basis alone. Instead, I'd
like to ask the startup community to look to the future: Think about how
much open source has helped you, and help to build a better world
— one where open source will be able to help you even more.
And remember that we live in a world where most startup founders end up
launching several companies over their careers: If the past decade of
open source software development has made your current startup company
possible, just think how much the next decade of open source software
development will help your next startup company.
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