On May 13, 2008, at 9:31 AM, Jeffrey Altman wrote:

Steve Simmons wrote:

We're a state-funded institution as well, so 501c(3) for OpenAFS doesn't mean that much to us. But it can make a big, big difference for corporations or individuals donating funds or equipment. If I had enough bucks in my pocket to pay for, say, the native windows client implementation, I'd save 35% by giving to the foundation rather than paying SN/etc. As a corporation (say, Sun, IBM, HP) I'd get pretty much nothing by giving hardware to SN or an individual. By donating it to the 501, I can deduct the cost. Ditto for donating my proprietary OS software that I'd like to have AFS work correctly on.

Steve:

I think you are overstating the benefit. A corporation that deducts the cost of OpenAFS development in full as a business expense will receive a larger tax write-off than by donating cash to the Foundation. Hardware that has been fully depreciated prior to donation also has no value from
the perspective of the corporation taxes.

Correct. On the other hand, having software developed by donating avoids
a number of, er, interesting corporate issues. You don't have to develop
the internal expertise needed before beginning the work, you don't encumber an existing employee nor hire another, ya-da, ya-da. If you have a feature- specific need, donation can be cheaper and easier than getting a contractor.

And I was kind of hoping companies would donate their relatively new stuff to make sure AFS runs on it, not fully depreciated stuff. Something running the newest iteration of SPARC, etc. There's definitely a deduction for the
company in such a case, tho nothing like the full retail value. I've not
looked in a few years, but full depreciation used to take three to four years, depending on which schedule you use. At that point there's some question as
to if we'd even want it.

The Foundation has a need to demonstrate that it is publicly supported. As a result contributions of cash, copyrights which were purchased through development contracts with commercial development houses, donations of new hardware, donations of OS or DevTool licenses, etc., anything that has a market price can help demonstrate public support.

Copyright contributions that are not the result of a market purchase have no value according to the IRS because the value cannot be fairly determined.

True. I was thinking of 'donating my proprietary OS software' in the sense of HP giving the Foundation new copies of HP/UX as it comes out, Microsoft donating various software they'd like AFS to run on, etc. Licenses and installable stuff,
not source.

_______________________________________________
OpenAFS-info mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.openafs.org/mailman/listinfo/openafs-info

Reply via email to