Forgive me but this part of the open source and foss confuses me. If you code and release an open source and free piece of software like say, a robust video player such as VLC, how is that dev being paid?

Because in my eyes (I’m not too privy to FOSS ins and outs)

I’m basically getting your software for free of no charge, it IS free as in free beer cos you’re not asking ME to pay it for so who is paying YOU?

Does it come via donations or wealthy corporations like Red Hat and Microsoft pay or fund open sourced projects that is given to the hard working developers of that OSS/FOSS project?

  • @[email protected]
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    16 days ago

    Most open source projects will have a donation page / link, so it relies on people feeling compelled to donate because the software provided is useful to them.

    Lemmy for example has options for financially supporting its development. Some Lemmy instances also feature a link to a donation page to cover the hosting costs.

    Some have an organisation behind it, like Firefox has the Mozilla Foundation to finance it. Actually it’s the other way around, see ahal’s comment below

    The team behind VLC has a “for profit” branch that adapts the video software for companies, allowing them to also finance VLC’s development in addition to donations.

    • @gedaliyah
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      916 days ago

      Some of Lemmy development is/was paid by foundation funding.

    • @[email protected]
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      716 days ago

      The Firefox example is actually the reverse, Firefox funds the Mozilla Foundation. This is a case of an open source project successfully monetising through search referrals (mostly from Google).

      • krdo
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        716 days ago

        I think consulting would be a better word

  • @palebluethought
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    16 days ago

    Like others have mentioned, there are various options (donations/sponsorships/grants) that larger projects will generally have some of, but for smaller projects (99% of what’s out there, by project count if not usage), the answer is simply “it isn’t.” It’s done as a hobby, as a resume booster, or with the hope of eventually becoming big enough to hit one of those revenue streams.

  • Emily (she/her)
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    1816 days ago

    I contribute and run some open source projects. Some projects receive sponsorships and contributions, some are backed by companies, a lot are just someone doing it on their own time, very few can actually meaningfully support the people working on them. Personally, I receive no money for mine.

  • slazer2au
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    1616 days ago

    depends on the project. Some projects are spun out from major corporations. Others are one dude making a thing and it gets used everywhere and taken over by venture capital firms.

    Some projects will have sponsorship, there are also government grants they can get, but I would say most comes from regular users doing reoccurring dontations.

    • oce 🐆
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      16 days ago

      Some projects are spun out from major corporations.

      This is most of the FOSS projects in data engineering and data science. They come from tech giants or some dudes who just left tech giants to create a FOSS tool with a paid managed version, and those may get bough back by other tech giants later.

      Example:

      Analytics and AI giant Databricks reportedly paid nearly $2 billion when it acquired Tabular in June, a startup that was only doing $1 million in annual recurring revenue, according to Bloomberg. That’s a pretty outrageous exit multiple, and it was purportedly fueled by a battle between Databricks and Snowflake.

      Tabular had over $30 million in funding, backed by Altimeter Capital, Andreessen Horowitz and Zetta Venture Partners, when it was acquired just three years after it was founded. Tabular’s valuation was tied to Apache Iceberg, a popular open source table format that the startup’s founders created while at Netflix. The startup quickly became an expensive pawn in the war between Databricks and Snowflake.https://techcrunch.com/2024/08/14/databricks-reportedly-paid-2-billion-in-tabular-acquisition/

  • kubok
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    1416 days ago

    Core developer of an open source software suite here. We make money by doing the following things:

    • We offer a free and open source community package that has the basics. However, we offer a number of professional packages that we offer yearly subscriptions for.
    • We host our software. We charge by the number of active users.
    • Custom development.
    • Paid support like migrations or troubleshooting. Also helping external developers develop custom modules.

    This allows us enough income to develop the community part of the software.

    • @trolololol
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      615 days ago

      Correct but also worth mentioning that most projects and people don’t reach any meaningful scale to generate income or even pay self running costs.

      I don’t think most people havr money as a goal when they come up with an idea and start an open source project. It’s more likely they want to try a new tech or are just passionate about the idea. Like entrepreneurs, but not capitalistic.

      Like start up unicorns, it’s a small percentage that gets to grow to epic propositions.

  • Skull giver
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    16 days ago

    It all starts out with people who make stuff for free, and sometimes they receive donations. There are also non-profit grants that can fund a few months here or there. Money is pooled in organisations, and those organisations pay out project members.

    Most of Linux development is done by companies like Red Hat, Intel, AMD, Canonical, you name it. Plenty of volunteers, but not enough to make projects like these. There are also projects by big companies like Twitter and Facebook that get open sourced because it’ll get them goodwill and free patches from the community. Facebook is developing React regardless of its license so they may as well share it.

    Smaller projects are just hobby projects most of the time. It’s “free” as in “mattress”, in that you should think twice before adding it, and don’t even think you’re entitled to help or free work.

    Sometimes that goes wrong, like when left-pad got pulled, or when colors.jb pushed an update in protest, and billion dollar companies could suddenly no longer update their software because they used the free stuff Some Guy put out in their critical build chain. Or, as xkcd accuratelt depicted it: https://xkcd.com/2347/

  • @Vinny_93
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    916 days ago

    FOSS is free, OSS doesn’t have to be. Very often open source software, of which the commercial fork is being maintained by a company, that company will profit from businesses using the software. Idk about VLC but Moodle, for instance, is open source and updates for it are based on a subscription model.

    The license agreement for OSS will often state that you are free to use it in your own home, but if you start commercially using the software, they expect you to pay. Some open source projects can get resold by service providers this way to handle deployment of updates, provide support, et cetera.

      • @Vinny_93
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        216 days ago

        In my experience, the term FOSS as in FLOSS is only (incorrectly, as you pointed out) used for software that is free if charge.

        But you are correct, the term says nothing about the pricing, they only say something about the licensing form.

  • Saki
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    916 days ago

    I’d assume it’s mostly donations

  • @khannie
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    16 days ago

    Our small company paid a prominent (of that specific driver) open source driver writer for prioritisation of some work more than once. All the code was GPL.

    I know it’s only one data point but it’s one way.

  • @[email protected]
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    15 days ago

    Ways open source projects get paid for:

    • people do it as a hobby and don’t get paid
    • people rely on donations
    • government funded software projects are usually open source
    • software created in an academic setting is usually released as open source (this often overlaps with government funding, but not always). Many important open source projects started in academia. Many open source licenses were initially written by academia for those projects (BSD was created by UC Berkeley, and the MIT license was created by MIT).
    • Sometimes companies have a business model that doesn’t involve selling software, and they don’t really benefit from having that software be proprietary. They may open source their software because it gets other people to use it, and by extension gets people to buy their paid products. For example, there are some free, open source software projects by Nvidia, but you would need to buy one of their graphics cards to take advantage of it.
    • Dual licensing. One strategy is to release your code as open source but under a copyleft license so it isn’t business-friendly. When a business wants to use it, they pay for a proprietary-licensed copy instead of using the open source copyleft version.
  • @[email protected]
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    15 days ago

    I think usually it’s just about costing the competitors money to try and fuck them. That’s the payment. 3ds max is priced unfairly and it’s unreasonable, that’s why Blender exists. Autodesk bought eagle cad, made it cost money, that’s why KiCad got made. I take pride in supporting open source everything in protest of how enshittified the world has become. It harms those corporations when more people use open source which is a cause I can get behind.

  • troed
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    616 days ago

    Lots of OSS is created by people who want to create something, and happily gives it away to others too.

    The problem is when others start depending, and demanding, work from that person. There is no good solution to that problem at the moment.

  • @AA5B
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    515 days ago

    My company hired at least one open source guy. The original code is internal to our company and he’s allowed work time to maintain it

    • radix
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      115 days ago

      That’s impressive. Is it still licensed under a libre copyleft license? Surely that’s too good to be true.

      • @AA5B
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        215 days ago

        Yes, the company does not own the license, theoretically has the same rights as anyone. And the source is replicated to externally

        From my perspective, it was really annoying to discover. I’m going through everything with scanners, trying to get tools and languages up to date and mitigate known vulnerabilities, but he did not want to bring his code up to date. I get that the company doesn’t own it, but I’m giving you company time to get your stuff up to date.