On 25-02-2017 18:49, Paul Boddie wrote:
On Saturday 25. February 2017 15.43.54 you wrote:
Don't get me wrong. It is not my goal to make money. My goal is to make free software libraries.
But it is still like asking for business advice, because many of the issues are exactly like structuring the interests in a business. I mentioned the matter of assessing shares in a project, and this is the kind of thing that platforms like Gratipay explicitly avoid because it is a difficult problem
I certainly want to avoid that too. Distributing money among contributers to a project would be a nightmare.
Again: I don't want to make money. I want companies that make profit from an open source library to contribute something back to the free/open software movement. The money could go to some other project that needs it or to FSF or some other non-profit organization.
If we don't make a way for private companies to pay for GPL software libraries then we are forcing them to develop a proprietary alternative to the library. This would not be good for the promotion of open software.
projects like PostgreSQL are permissively licensed, but they do have companies operating in their community that do fund the development of such projects. The issue here is whether those companies contribute enough back to the project or not.
Intel is contributing a lot of work to the Gnu project. But their motivation is to serve their own interests, making sure Gnu software works optimally on Intel processors. Intel's competitors cannot afford to contribute as much, so the result is that Gnu software might perform less optimally on AMD and VIA processors. I think this kind of industry contribution is problematic.
Allow me to repeat my initial idea:
I have also thought about a scheme that requires no administration. You would get a commercial license automatically by donating a certain amount of money to some non-profit organization and posting proof of payment to some repository. Would that work?
Any suggestions for worthy organizations that would be happy to receive this money? It has to be organizations or projects that somehow contribute to free software or digital freedom. Anything else would probably be too controversial.