this post was submitted on 17 Oct 2023
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Wikipedia does it just fine, I'd argue they're a pretty good comparison with similar overhead - developers, moderators, infrastructure. (Except obviously they're a single org, rather than distributed.)
Wikipedia is also a registered charity, has a $100,000,000 endowment and receives substantial funding from philanthropic foundations and tech giants.
Personally, I don't think that's a particularly realistic approach/funding model for Lemmy.
On the other hand I think the way they do a donations drive every year is a good idea and probably works well. The Fedi could benefit from that I’d bet.
The Fedi could absolutely benefit from something like that!
I wonder if we could coordinate and plan a day/weekend (sometime when we expect a large number of users) where folks have memes about donating, encourages people to, devs tell us about their needs/plans etc...
At the same time and just to pump the brakes a little, I work in charitable giving and for at least our organization, while we do mass donor drives, those are mostly about engagement as the real money comes from high level donors. That being said, our potential donor population and strengths are probably very different.
How was it done in the past? Forums? BBSes? Fidonet?
Well yeah, compare us to 20 years of wikipedia and of course there's going to be a massive difference. I'm not saying we're going to follow them, but they are an example of success in this area.
It's also an explicitly philanthropic venture with a noble mission about being the source of human knowledge.
I love our memes but they aren't quite the same.
Wikipedia received almost 400k in 2005 and more than 1.5 million in donations by 2006.
For what it's worth, a lot of instances are funding just like wikipedia did but if we want to expand with full-time devs, moderators etc (which is what I think we'll need for long term sustainability) I just don't think wikipedia's success is a particularly reasonable comparison.