Linux.com

Feature

LinuxFund names new director, schedules payouts

By Jay Lyman on July 22, 2005 (8:00:00 AM)

Share    Print    Comments   

In an effort to restart, the LinuxFund credit card program, intended to benefit the Linux and open source community, has named a new executive director and announced it will begin funding open source projects again.

LinuxFund's new head, David Mandel, told NewsForge in an interview the funding -- $500 per month for a year to Debian, Freenode, and Wikipedia -- will be given to the projects quarterly and is part of an effort to get LinuxFund back on track. Mandel said that with help from LinuxFund's founder, Benjamin Cox, he was confident the project, and more importantly its payments to FOSS developers, would resume and possibly even grow.

The fund -- which derives money from a percentage of LinuxFund cardholders' purchases using Visa and MasterCard credit cards -- is undergoing a facelift after the royalties kept rolling in, but the administration of the project fell apart last year.

LinuxFund reportedly takes in approximately $100,000 per year from an estimated 5,000 to 10,000 cardholders, or at least those figures were right at the time the project's site went offline and its directors let it go dormant, at which time the fund was worth about $126,000 in checkings and savings accounts. Mandel said the project will move conservatively at first, saying, "We don't know what bills are out there."

However, the fund's proceeds will be distributed, he stressed, and soon. The Debian, Freenode, and Wikipedia projects will each receive $6,000 beginning this month, and LinuxFund hopes to support eight to 10 more open source projects with the quarterly cash flow, reviewing its grants on an annual basis, according to Mandel and the new LinuxFund site.

"LinuxFund funds projects of interest to the open source community," Mandel said. "We have never restricted the funding to software development or to Linux. While new code is important to the open source community, other things, like support and education, are as well, and LinuxFund has been willing to fund projects in any of these areas."

Mandel said that in the past the fund has relied on local Portland, Ore.-based open source community members who can meet in person -- developers and non-developers -- but said the group must be open to others. Mandel said he would like to reassemble the project's developer board, which includes OSDL's Chris Wright and Patrick Mochel and others, to determine more recipients of the money.

Mandel praised Debian and Wikipedia as important projects that were dedicated to openness. Although Debian leaders did not respond to requests for comment, Wikipedia spokesperson Elisabeth Bauer said the Wikimedia Foundation relied on public donations for its projects, including Wikipedia, and that the organization was grateful for regular basis funding that assists in planning, adding it is coming from a project "closely aligned with our own goals."

"As one of the top 40 Internet sites, Wikipedia attracts an enormous amount of traffic and visitors, which leaves the project in constant need for hardware," Bauer said. "Like most donations, the money will therefore be used to cover hardware and bandwidth costs, and possibly software development work necessary to provide Wikimedia's free services to the public."

As for Freenode, some FOSS proponents charged that support for the project was actually support more for the individual behind the project, executive director Robert Levin. Levin said he welcomed the support. "My first reaction is, wow, that's very gratifying," he said. "It's very good to know people are thinking of us." Levin said his organization would probably accept the funding from LinuxFund.

As for those thinking ill of him and Freenode, Levin defended his organization, which is a 501(c)3 nonprofit organization, and credited the harsh sentiments to the personal politics of Internet Relay Chat. Levin reported he earns $16,000 a year, which is about half of the Freenode organization's budget.

LinuxFund's Mandel also defended Freenode. "They are a large network that requires a lot of volunteers and contributed resources to keep it going. They don't do software and they don't do content, but they give thousands of open source users and developers an organized way to communicate with one another. And they do this with one employee who is paid $16,000 a year! That is why we think they are worth funding."

As for Mandel's own salary, he said he was being paid $1,000 per month as executive director of LinuxFund, less than the previous executive director, in an effort to keep overhead low, which Mandel said is one reason LinuxFund has survived. The fund itself is not a 501(c)3 nonprofit, but rather is listed as a public benefit nonprofit with the Oregon Secretary of State's office, as reported by Ilan Rabinovitch, who has followed LinuxFund on his blog.

"I have other income (even after I leave [Oregon State University] next February)," Mandel said, referring to his pending semi-retirement. "So I can afford to live on this. I'm also moving LinuxFund's office into my home, so the fund won't have to rent office space anymore. This should save the fund $400 to $500 per month."

Mandel reiterated that while it may take time and some hurdles remain, he foresees LinuxFund continuing and even growing its number of cardholders and funds for open source through appearances at trade shows, a practice which helped the project grow after its launch in 1999.

Share    Print    Comments   

Comments

on LinuxFund names new director, schedules payouts

Note: Comments are owned by the poster. We are not responsible for their content.

Organise competition(s) with it.

Posted by: JelleB on July 23, 2005 06:26 PM
It is good to see the Linuxfund underway again. Altough probably everyone has an opinion on what to spend all that money on(ME ME ME!) i still want to make a suggestion:
Organise some competitions like the X-price or the DARPA Grand Challenge. Choose one or two topics at a time, seek out the most vocal people/leaders in that field (For instance Guido van Rossum if Python was the topic) and let them decide on a target that promotes Linux and the current topic.
How the actual contest is organised is something to figure out fot LinuxFund. I think this will be able te generate a lot of good code for the benefit of Linux. As a side effect it will generate free publicity for LinuxFund itself, allowing it to attract more LinuxFund cardholders, which in turn allows LinuxFund to organise a bigger competition next [year|semester|trimester|month|time].
The other aim (apart from good code for the benefit of all) should be to encourage risky software projects. To innovate one needs to take risks, but some/most of the time those chances don't work out (if they all work out you took too little risk). Any form that makes more OSS authors take more risk without hurting the stable baseline should be explored by LinuxFund. Maybe it should even encourage code forks and evaluate the forks for effectiveness after a set time.
I think some form of competition (be it a winner-takes-all style like X-price or divide-and-conquer like Google's summer of code) will give very good results and public exposure. And while Linux probably does not need it per-se, a lot of people will love to see Linux florish.

#

Re:Organise competition(s) with it.

Posted by: Anonymous Coward on July 23, 2005 07:07 PM
hmm. i odnt get it. it just seesm like a scam

did anyone ever benefit?

i think not.

#

Re:Organise competition(s) with it.

Posted by: Anonymous Coward on July 23, 2005 09:57 PM
Umm....they didn't give anything else yet.

#

Re:Organise competition(s) with it.

Posted by: Anonymous Coward on July 26, 2005 02:25 AM
I know at least one project leader to whom some money was given.

I voted for his project and invited others to vote, the project won the round of funding, a few weeks (or months, can't remember) I asked the project leader if he got something and he told me he got money, I can't remember exactly how much but I think it was $1000.00.

#

How to participate

Posted by: The_Wilschon on July 24, 2005 05:59 AM
How do you get a card? The root page <a href="http://www.linuxfund.org/" title="linuxfund.org">http://www.linuxfund.org/</a linuxfund.org> is very uninformative, and there are no internal links... I would certainly like to have one of these cards.

#

Re:How to participate

Posted by: Anonymous Coward on July 25, 2005 04:47 PM
It was there before at some link.
But I remember it was only for Canadian/US citizens. I would like it if they would also include european countries.

#

Re:How to participate

Posted by: JLyman on July 26, 2005 03:05 AM
Although you can't find LinuxFund among their credit card offerings online, you can call MBNA (1-800-932-2775), the bank which issues the cards. I believe it is only offered in the U.S. and Canada.

#

easy

Posted by: flacco on July 25, 2005 11:04 AM
take one half of the money and finance the development of a drop-in, no-fuss ldap authentication package.


then use the other half to bribe the ornery crew at debian to make it the default auth system for debian.

#

LinuxFund names new director, schedules payouts

Posted by: Anonymous [ip: 192.168.3.42] on March 04, 2008 04:03 PM
This is really good news! Linux users all around the world will be impressed.

P.S. Plz remove that ugly spam links.

_________________
<a href="http://www.qarea.com/">software outsourcing</a>

#

LinuxFund names new director, schedules payouts

Posted by: Anonymous [ip: 217.199.112.88] on March 12, 2008 08:42 PM

This story has been archived. Comments can no longer be posted.



 
Tableless layout Validate XHTML 1.0 Strict Validate CSS Powered by Xaraya