>
> One thing I thought of would be to change the direction of the process
> to be an invitation rather than an application.
> If you see someone helping, instead of pushing him to apply you could
> fill in the form describing his contributions (and possibly the name
> of someone else who can support it) and if accepted he would get an
> invitation to join the foundation.
>

That seems highly masonic.

The bylaws state the following[1]

"Any contributor to GNOME shall be eligible for member-ship.

A “contributor” shall be defined as any individual who has contributed to a
non-trivial improvement of the GNOME Project, such as code, documentation,
trans-
lations, maintenance of project-wide resources, or other non-trivial
activities which
benefit the GNOME Project. Large amounts of advocacy or bug reporting may
qual-
ify one as a contributor, provided that such contributions are
significantly above the
level expected of an ordinary user. Contributions made in the course of
employment
will be considered and will be ascribed to the individuals involved, rather
than accruing
to all employees of a “contributing” corporation."



I suggest we just make the rules much clearer to people on the outreach
pages by clarifying what "non-trivial" actually means. GSoC/OPW interns are
told to make more contributions after their 3 month internship before
applying. That suggests that the contributions they make over their 3 month
internship of 40 hours per week are trivial. It's no wonder contributors
find the process of making a membership application intimidating
considering that, isn't it? How could a volunteer compete with an someone
who is being paid to work on GNOME full time (even if it is just for 3
months)?

[1] http://www.gnome.org/wp-content/uploads/2012/02/bylaws.pdf
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