Full disclosure:
Transfer #1
    "transfer": [
      {
        "type": "Transfer",
        "source": "https://meritora.com/i/d***Digital Bazaar Executive Name 
Redacted***/accounts/primary",
        "destination": "https://meritora.com/i/netflux/accounts/primary";,
        "amount": "0.0098000000",
        "currency": "USD",
        "comment": "Payment for Hello content monetization! by admin."
      },
      {
        "type": "Transfer",
        "source": "https://meritora.com/i/***Digital Bazaar Executive Name 
Redacted***/accounts/primary",
        "destination": "https://meritora.com/i/authority/accounts/main";,
        "amount": "0.0002000000",
        "currency": "USD",
        "comment": "Meritora Authority Processing"
      }
    ],

Transfer #2
    "transfer": [
      {
        "type": "Transfer",
        "source": "https://meritora.com/i/manu/accounts/primary";,
        "destination": "https://meritora.com/i/netflux/accounts/primary";,
        "amount": "0.0098000000",
        "currency": "USD",
        "comment": "Payment for Hello content monetization! by admin."
      },
      {
        "type": "Transfer",
        "source": "https://meritora.com/i/manu/accounts/primary";,
        "destination": "https://meritora.com/i/authority/accounts/main";,
        "amount": "0.0002000000",
        "currency": "USD",
        "comment": "Meritora Authority Processing"
      }
    ],

(TL;DR - I (netflux) received <2 cents from Digital Bazaar executives including 
Manu Sporny for content that was worth less than that to me. I also took the 
free penny promo from http://meritora.com but I already closed the window with 
the JSON-LD so you'll have to take my word for it)

Very long post but for those interested in capturing the overall essence of 
things previously said, I wanted to just address various comments without 
putting the authors of the comments alongside them. You can find them in the 
thread elsewhere if desired.

"I am very concerned about motivations of Debian project volunteers being 
distorted by money so I would suggest only allowing donations to"

I wanted to point out that social relations are distorted by the fact that 
capitalism is a class society stratified by proximity to the means of 
production under conditions of value exchange. Donations are not value 
exchange, but are more properly part of a gift economy.

"We have never needed it, and from the discussions I have taken part in or 
witnessed, I really doubt we would need it now."

I met an Occupy Goldman Sachs activist who commended debian very highly to me 
over another flavor I had mentioned. In my discussions with Occupy activists 
there would be a lot of value within the occupy movement at least in having 
Working Groups take over some of the responsibilities of the Finance Working 
Group. Because we realize resources are important and that they can't get to 
where they will have the greatest beneficial impact with a centralized topology 
network

"Excluding people with money is just another way of excluding people from Free 
Software development. I'm not so sure it's been as healthy for us or our users 
as assumed here."

"We can build this system such that those that don't want any donations can 
pass it on to the Debian Project, or reject all donations outright. We can also 
build this system such that those that would like donations can state exactly 
how they want the donation to be split up among the project participants. This 
approach ends up being fair to both sides and
doesn't silence either opinion."

I would add to this that it would be nice whether the current system is kept or 
a new one is adopted to encourage package maintainers or debian or upstream to 
expose structured financial data in XBRML or some other standardized ontology 
on track to be maintained by not-for-profit interests in a way that could be 
pulled into all manner of transparency and accountability applications to find 
out the state of the project's finances, which so far I'm unaware of anything 
like that existing for debian finances. Payswarm uses JSON-LD which is 
unambiguous, machine readable and also very human readable.

"Anyone can locate a particular Debian contributor and wire them 15 Bitcoin."

Let's say I did some work that was valuable to a particular package. Let's say 
that package was valuable to the ecology of debian. How does my contribution 
currently get acknowledged and rewarded by debian accountants? Why is that 
better than letting donors choose? Because we trust donors to give to Debian 
but NOT to give directly to package maintainers? Even if we have sensible 
defaults set in public by package maintainers that are presumably part of a 
functional community that can presumably police itself?

Doesn't this just mean that the community can become more functional by all the 
package maintainers meeting with each other more often, socializing more often, 
so that they all know who to gift the money to and who not to?

"Debian is indifferent about how its developers find time and devotion for our 
shared project.

"Even finding the correct Debian Developer to send money to is a very difficult 
proposition for someone that is just using a piece of software."

"We tried DuncTank -- I'd contend that the net amount of productive work done 
was reduced by that initiative, and some very active contributors were 
demotivated to the point that they went away and didn't come back."

A brief cross reference of DuncTank and IBM turned up nothing for me so I'm not 
sure what we're talking about but I will say something about what I think 
motivates people. I think the rote busywork is motivated better by money and 
inspired insight is motivated better by paying enough to take the money issue 
off the table and then not having "bonus" or "incentives" after that other than 
mastery, autonomy and purpose. But I don't see money as having been taken off 
the table for the army of debian developers we never see because they're too 
busy fighting mortgage foreclosure or living on the streets.

"It is bound to direct money to highly visible projects, regardless of the 
effort required to package them"

How does the money that currently goes to debian accounting get spent? Do we 
really need a star network topology rather than a p2p structures to get 
relevant information to decision makers in a functional community that can take 
the time to build community and police itself.

Building a community is best done in bars IMO. This is how the American 
Revolution happened, it's what the people who built the pyramids were paid in 
(beer) and I wouldn't feel comfortable drinking at a bar at a debian user group 
that hasn't told me the community building beer budget in advance of the event. 
Could get corporate sponsorship I guess, but if not, then I may have to stay 
home cause it's awkward going to a bar with no money.

"How do we determine a fair split between a couple of developers, one living in 
a penthouse in New York, and another living in a shanty town on a dollar a day."

Let everyone tell their story and let donors choose. How does debian do it at 
present? By not doing it, that's all.

"If a developer and their customer negotiate a deal, nobody but the developer 
need worry if they think it's a fair deal, and nobody but the developer's 
reputation is at risk.  Otherwise we'll start to see complaints like: "I gave 
Debian $1000 and they don't even acknowledge my bug reports""

Firstly that's conflating Debian with a default preset group of recipients set 
presumably with community input, which could be Doctors Without Borders, a 
graphic artist and a janitor, but more importantly do you think there'd be a 
surge in the number of reports that anybody gives a damn what the big spender 
thinks he bought with a clearly labeled donation?

"If it were needed or useful, Debian would not exist."

"It's nice to think everything is hunky-dory, but all I see is a large sea of 
users completely cut off from remedy and lots of developers complaining they 
don't have enough time because they need to take jobs either doing non-free 
software or not-software."

"If you're seriously attempting to equate "I'll buy you a beer if you help me" 
with "corrupt bribery", then I suspect the net effect is going to be that 
people stop reading the rest of your argument."

So you're saying the monetary value of the bribe is too small for you. But you 
don't know what percent of my budget is spent on food and beer and you don't 
know whether I am a missing voice from the debian community either. So you 
don't really know how much of my time has been diverted from debian by bribes 
small enough to fit in a single cup, do you?

"By 'people', you meant you right?"

This is a recurring issue.

"I'm very lukewarm about this right now, but I think with some sound arguments, 
I'd warm up to it."

Love it!

1) I want to donate to a nameless faceless debian package maintainer based on 
metadata such as what package it is and how long the current maintainer has 
maintained it for. I do not need their address or facial recognition software 
to make this decision. I am a grown-up. I have already met people with cable 
bills and proofs of mortgage and addresses and identifiable facial features and 
they were a dime a dozen.
Or alternatively I am poor and unable to do the above but I'd be very good at 
software if I could devote more time to it.

2) Co-maint of gcc, bash, libc, linux should be done by responsible people. If 
they're responsible they'll re-gift the money intelligently. This is a gift 
economy and a transparency issue and a community issue of what should the 
future of debian be as decided by those entrusted with its future, especially 
the maintainers of the more popular packages.

3) About "paybullies", manage expectations better. Coders don't expect money 
for their code at present even though as others pointed out there are sometimes 
structural ways this happens indirectly. So "paybullies" shouldn't expect code 
for their money even though anything can still happen (but having a functional 
community capable of policing these expectations is both more likely and 
lessens this problem).

And the reason for this change is that if the point is to lessen pay for play 
in free software, then leaving it up to the corporations has major structural 
problems but without the community engagement that would otherwise be there to 
help address real problems.


----- Original Message -----
From: Russ Allbery <r...@debian.org>
To: debian-project@lists.debian.org
Cc: 
Sent: Tuesday, June 18, 2013 1:00 AM
Subject: Re: PaySwarm-based Debian donations

Martin Owens <docto...@gmail.com> writes:
> On Mon, 2013-06-17 at 21:18 -0700, Russ Allbery wrote:

>> how Debian is "in the way"

> Debian takes code from websites with donation buttons, economic
> incentive options, kickstarter updates, support contracts, developer
> sponsorships, programs and projects of all kinds and general invitations
> to participate.

> Strips them all out. Then strait faced, delivers them to consumers who
> are never given the opportunity to know about any of it.

Ah, I see.

Well, first, we don't strip them out if they're included in the package.
We retain such documentation in a well-defined place in the distribution
and maintain metadata pointing to the upstream web sites.

However, apart from that, I don't think our users are that dim, honestly.
I think Debian's users generally understand the difference between a Linux
distribution and upstream.  This may not be the case for distributions
that are explicitly targetting and marketing to a mass audience, but
that's not Debian's niche.

Also, I'll say that, as a free software *user*, this is what I expect from
free software.  I don't expect to be badgered for donations, nor do I
expect my relationship with free software to be economic.  If that's what
an upstream is after, they should pick a different software license; the
free software licenses are really quite explicit that money should not be
expected to be forthcoming.  I don't release my work as free software for
money; I release it because I like helping people, and because I use a
bunch of *other* people's free software.  It's a communal relationship.

Some of us (myself definitely included) are involved in free software
precisely *because* we're strongly anti-capitalist, anti-marketing, and
firmly opposed to the economic structures that dominate so much of the
rest of life.  If your plea is for distributions to act more like Apple in
routing customer money to developers, I think you're going to get a quite
chilly reception.  Avoiding that financial structure based on "customers"
and "producers" is the whole *point* for some of us.

-- 
Russ Allbery (r...@debian.org)               <http://www.eyrie.org/~eagle/>


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