This is the opportunity to write a wish list
This is the opportunity to write a wish list
Posted Jan 8, 2026 13:46 UTC (Thu) by alx.manpages (subscriber, #145117)In reply to: This is the opportunity to write a wish list by ebee_matteo
Parent article: European Commission issues call for evidence on open source
But we're not talking about contracting services, we're talking about funding free software. The main problem in free software is (most often) not lack of features or lack of service. Companies and entities aren't donating to projects to get services from them or new features. They're donating to allow them to keep them working as they're currently working. The problem is that programmers are not paid to do what they do, and they only do it as much as they have free time to donate.
When companies want new features (e.g., kernel), they do hire programmers to implement specific features. But when companies/individuals/entities donate to some project, they just want it to survive; they don't ask for features or services or anything.
Similarly, when someone buys a basic software license, they're just paying to be able to use it. Of course, you may pay extra to get service from the provider, but that's not a basic license, and that's not what should be asked of free software projects to get grants.
Requiring the programmers to do bureaucracy is just wasting their time and energy.
> There is no "here some money, do with it as you please, see you next year".
I'll quote exactly what $SOMEFAANG said to me when they offered funding for the Linux man-pages project a couple of years ago (after <https://lwn.net/Articles/989215/>):
"I just saw your announcement on LWN. How much would you need to continue the work you've been doing?"
Just as simple as it looks.
This is *exactly* what I think should be done. If you (in this case EU) depend on a project, go to its maintainers, and ask them what they need to continue doing what they do.
