I typically choose privacy and security related projects, individuals, and causes, these can be big projects like Signal, or regular donations for things like https://www.openrightsgroup.org/ , or random donations to smaller projects (that are sometimes individuals and mostly OSS but it being OSS isn't the core criteria).
I also include small charities that do things like refurbish old company laptops by servicing and installing Ubuntu and then providing them to schools and causes that cannot afford them.
It's mostly stable with a little scatter gun, I keep track in my monthly budget and just hover around that 10% mark. When I sold shares, I did extend the tithe to that too.
Edit: I am not religious but did learn of tithes when I was young and it seemed like a good thing that some religions do and I figured that if I started when young I'd never notice it. Mostly I don't notice it (though when I was saving for a mortgage I did stop and think I would've achieved it a lot sooner were I to not have the tithe - I stopped for a few months when I moved but slowly restored it).
https://freebsdfoundation.org/donate/
There used to be a way to give to the FreeBSD Foundation when you bought something on Humble Bundle too, but I haven’t bought anything via Humble Bundle for a good while and last time I tried to give money to FreeBSD Foundation that way I couldn’t figure out how to do it again.
I also used the fundraiser feature on Facebook one time on my birthday and posted that for my birthday I wished that people help give money to the FreeBSD Foundation, because FreeBSD means a lot to me. I also described FreeBSD a bit in the post and why I wanted to do this fundraiser. So a couple of friends and family members contributed to this fundraiser of mine. It was a very small scale thing, but it was nice to do this and I appreciated that those friends and family members helped me donate a bit of money for a project that I find important.
- (Monthly) IFF https://internetfreedom.in/
- Mozilla
- EFF
- Wikipedia
- KDE
- Manjaro
- Simpletask https://github.com/mpcjanssen/simpletask-android
- DownThemAll https://www.downthemall.net/
edit: I also like to buy merch from OSS affiliated companies. e.g. mozilla hoodie, Neo4j shirt etc.
I don't personally donate cash; instead, I contribute my time. And in fact I take donations to support my work: https://patreon.com/cperciva
I have also given money to nonprofits that are adjacent to open source, such as the Free Software Conservancy.
I also write a lot of software and release it under FOSS licenses. Over the years most of it has been unfunded (and I never sought funding) but some of it (and, this year, most of it) is developed on a contract basis so money is changing hands, but again no looking for "donations" from users who happen to pick it up from github or whatever.
Thinking about it: individual donations to OSS are an odd thing. I can see two reasons an entity might donate:
1) They believe ideologically in the impact the project has on the world
2) They directly benefit from it (and feel a social obligation and/or just want to make sure it remains sustainable)
But the thing is:
1) There aren't many software projects I could see being invested in at an ideological level. Maybe a BSD or a Firefox, but not like, a web framework.
2) Similarly there aren't many software projects that an individual would directly benefit from in their personal life. Again maybe a BSD or a Firefox, but not really a web framework.
A business benefits greatly from those libraries and frameworks, and should absolutely donate (though they rarely do), and if I had my own business as an individual then it would donate to the OSS that it used. But as an employed individual I don't feel like I should be subsidizing the projects that my employer - and not myself - is benefitting from.
None of this is to discourage anyone who feels moved to donate to a project for their own reasons, but I think (and I think we all know) OSS funding is broken, and won't be fixed through sheer principle.
I hope that once they get a full IDE-experience (debugging, autocomplete, etc) that it will really take off.
But this question has prompted me to think more about who/what to donate to more, especially to those that have vastly impacted my digital life. Some off the top of my head:
- homebrew -- it's wild to image the times before homebrew - @tpope -- I use vim a lot less these days but Tim Pope has been an incredibly prolific plugin writer - linux foundation / fsf - obvi - Languages: Clojurists together, Crystal, etc.
Edit: I realized I'm still a patron (per episode so it does not matter) for the defunct podcast Lambda Cast. This isn't quite sponsoring an open source dev but it seemed related. Wild that I started listening to this after I enjoyed messing with Ramda.js and now I write Haskell at work. Weird life.
Mozilla Thunderbird
Mozilla Foundation (would donate to Firefox directly if there were a way to do that)
Some Firefox extensions
VLC Player
The Document Foundation (LibreOffice)
Free Software Foundation
Wikipedia (stopped after sometime due to the heavy annoyances)
and some others I may be forgetting right now.
[1] https://www.gitpod.io/blog/gitpod-open-source-sustainability...
I also believe that corporations should be far, far more involved in OSS' financing, as they are the largest beneficiaries of it while skimping on the costs. We should not even promote personal donations to OSS.
(edit: I am an fsf member and have contributed to the Debian project)
Can't wait for it to make it in tree. Shocked more companies don't have more to donate. Especially considering how much man hours and pain btfs caused my previous company alone. They could have bank rolled this entire project for a fraction.
I don’t donate crazy much, a few streaming services worth, split across many projects. I’m not going to single handedly fund any project, but if everyone gives that amount, a lot of worries are solved.
It also feels pretty good.
I do contribute detailed bug reports, feedback and code fixes when I can, but truth be told, I'm not giving back nearly as much as I get from open source software.
Organisations that make open source projects (like for example Tor Project or Wikimedia), that I do at least once a year.
Made a suggestion to the company I work at, to sponsor OSS projects we use: currently $ 1600 per month, mostly via GitHub sponsors.
To Mozilla, because I am happy Firefox user and want it to stay competitive.
To Whisper system, because I love Signal and want everyone to use it.
To Wikimedia, because I use Wikipedia everyday.
Or a system tool that monitors what you use and helps you allocate donations?
Now their current daily cost is a few hundred more than I donated
And this is not limited to Open Source.
I use a lot of open source stuff in my work and life.
When I see something that really adds value to my life, I donate to it.
The process is like this:
1. Use a product for long enough (months to years).
2. I see that the product makes my life easier and/or makes some activity really enjoyable- it adds value to my life, in general.
3. They are not assholes. They don't shove ads down your throat or ask for donation five times a day, or block really essential features behind a paywall.
If these three criteria are met, I donate money to them, although never automatically recurrent payment. Only one-time donations, sometimes repeatedly.
This way, I have donated to or bought paid versions of-
1. Linux Mint
2. Blender
3. Ebookdroid (android reader app)
4. Lithium (Epub reader app)
5. Qbittorrent
6. Infinity (privacy-focused reddit client that lets you download videos)
And many others.
i also support that guy working on freecad on patreon. (realthunder? something?)
I'm reminded of disease research charities where most of the money goes to administrative overhead and the people doing the work and making the breakthroughs don't see any of it.