Other than the persistent quest for how to make money by giving your work away --- another inherent contradiction of open source is the idea that a "license" will protect your work.
A license isn't worth much unless you have the ability to defend it. And defending it also requires --- money.
Recently, I've been trying to figure out how to finance software and hardware that's actually useful to everyday people. The sentiment clearly resonated with HN:
but when I tried asking around how I could finance a useful OS app, I didn't get much of an answer. That's why I spent some days on research to understand how the FOSS projects that I enjoy and rely on are financing their operations. And how well that appears to work (or not).
Other than the persistent quest for how to make money by giving your work away --- another inherent contradiction of open source is the idea that a "license" will protect your work.
A license isn't worth much unless you have the ability to defend it. And defending it also requires --- money.
Oops!
Recently, I've been trying to figure out how to finance software and hardware that's actually useful to everyday people. The sentiment clearly resonated with HN:
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47713454
but when I tried asking around how I could finance a useful OS app, I didn't get much of an answer. That's why I spent some days on research to understand how the FOSS projects that I enjoy and rely on are financing their operations. And how well that appears to work (or not).