this post was submitted on 27 Sep 2024
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Not specifically software, but I divide my donations into three categories - for my budget, that's basically the $10-20 range, the $20-500 range, and $500-2000. I track the donations I make over the year, with a target in mind. For me, the target is 10% of income.
I decide which organizations are doing the most important work, and prioritize those. I try to donate monthly to those that I make use of regularly, then I give the rest as what comes up from day to day.
I consider free software to be a social good, so I don't separate it from other giving.
The most annoying part for me is the fact that none of them have the capability for annual recurring donations. It's literally monthly or ad-hoc, which is fucking stupid and basically hands more fees to the banks.
Librepay/Forgejo had the best I've seen, which encouraged me to double my donation (to minimize fees) and said it'd remind me in 2 years.
True, but most orgs and devs would take the reliable monthly income rather than an unpredictable infusion every two years. If it's a massive donor base, maybe those things even out. For smaller, active projects, I don't mind giving a percentage to the bank knowing that they can rely on my donations every month. The larger annual gifts are usually reserved for orgs like clinics, food banks, and community institutions that can handle the fluctuations.
10 % is really good!