If you have tried it, feel free to share your stories. I would appreciate it if the focus of the conversation does not become whether what i proposed is ethical. It should also not become hyper focused on the USoA where i assume this is not possible.
I've known a few long-term unemployed people in NZ who programmed a lot for fun. Not disciplined "open source as a job", however.
Collecting unemployment can be a surprising amount of work. In NZ/AU it's sufficiently annoying and unpleasant that not many people who could hold down a decent job would bother. So working as designed, I guess.
Nominally you're supposed to apply for N jobs per week, go to interviews, do training or whatever according to a plan you make with a case worker. The enforcement is not entirely consistent from one benefit office to another or even across case workers. People's experiences vary a lot.
In NZ it's harder to move to a low cost of living area - those areas have no jobs. They'll pay your benefit if you grew up there but not if you move there.
tldr; it didn’t work out financially but I’m super glad I tried, if only to not regret not trying. The biggest thing I didn’t expect was for capitalist instinct to take over: I liked working on open source because I could work on what I wanted to; but to work on what I wanted to indefinitely, and play the latest video games and go out to eat sometimes or whatever, I needed the thing to make some money.
So an unplanned, surprising amount of time went into revenue generation. I previously had a Patreon page that brought in ~$20 / mo, and during my year I got to ~$500 / mo (Patreon + Stripe). I also picked up some contract work for a few hours a week. No matter what happens the bill comes due, in more ways than one—I grew a new respect for founders, who have more than just themselves riding on this.
Even so, it was freeing to turn my nights-and-weekends fun work into full-time work, to spend stupid irresponsible amounts of time on small things like polish, to be able to drop what I was doing at any time to go hang with friends or walk the dog or go get eggs, and to dip my toes into every trade from design to swag to marketing to customer support to user research. I also used my free nights and weekends to learn a foreign language at a local community college.
Wouldn’t trade it for the world, but probably also won’t be doing it again until retirement.