On Wed, May 29, 2019 at 10:46:48AM +0200, Ansgar wrote: > On Wed, 2019-05-29 at 10:38 +0200, Raphael Hertzog wrote: > > Use the $300,000 on our bank accounts? > > I heard that this didn't work out well the last time ("dunc tank"), > though that was before the time I followed Debian development.
I tend to concur with Raphael and Holger here. We've learned a few lessons, but that doesn't mean it cannot work. Indeed, I argue that "we" are paying developers now and you just didn't notice. Freexian was already mentioned. But the Linux Foundation is also paying people to make Debian reproducible. They're putting a similar amount of money into Debian. While Canonical maintains Ubuntu, they also pay a number of people who work on Debian directly and often times push their work into Debian first. I think we can honestly say that Debian wouldn't be where it is today without Canonical's support in a positive sense. A number of people report their activities on planet.d.o and some disclose which parts of their work are being paid. It turns out that some fraction of maintenance cost is performed on company time. What all of these have in common is that it's some external (to Debian) entity that decides which work ends up being done and that it is the business of that external entity to source the relevant money. The decision who is being paid is externalized from the Debian project and that is a quite strong difference to dunc tank. So if someone were to run a "Fix problems in Debian" company and were able to source money for doing so, I think that'd actually work. I'm less convinced that we can use Debian money for this in any way. But we can still tell people: If you want to improve X in Debian, consider donating to Y. In a sense, I'm arguing that this money business should be decentralized. And it already is. Helmut