Conservancy Blog
Displaying posts tagged fundraiser
2024 End-of-Year Fundraiser Succeeds: over $480k to support software freedom
by
on January 16, 2025We thank both donors who offered this historic $204,877 match & those who gave to help to exceed the challenge
In late November, SFC, with the help of a group of generous individuals who pledged match gifts large and small, posted a huge challenge to our donors. We were so thankful for the donors who came together to offer others a match challenge of $204,877 — which was substantially larger than any of our match challenges in history.
Donors heard our ask, and we were even more thankful of all the donors who responded. Toward the end, we were so overwhelmed by last minute response that we were tabulating updates by hand. We saw so many donors who had already given coming in for another $10, $50 or $100 to get us there. We made the match primarily because of the hundreds of small donors who came in with Sustainer amounts, and we thank those small donors so much for often doing a bit extra: so many of you hit the $512 and even the $1024 button instead of the minimum of $128. It means so much to us when we see a donor who gave $128 in 2023 double their donation for 2024 — you all made this match challenge succeed. We also so appreciate the donors who, despite experiencing financial challenges, gave smaller amounts when it was a stretch for them to give at all.
Most surprising of all, an anonymous donor who in the past has made a very large donation around the time of FOSDEM came in early this year. That donation bursts us right through our status bar and puts us well over. We've raised over $475,000 this season, which is now reflected on our fundraiser status bar. (We're still tabulating and entering the paper checks and ACH/wire transactions that came during the final days of the fundraiser, so the number may soon increase even more!)
We are truly humbled. Every year, our staff is working tirelessly through the holiday season to make sure we balance our work and fundraising. Every dollar you all give us is noticed and appreciated, and gets us there, step by step.
SFC does receive some grants and corporate sponsorship for which we are also grateful, but the bulk of our funding comes from individual donors, like you. Fundraising is (sometimes annoyingly) mandatory work that as a small staff we must do in addition to our normal work. Nevertheless, it's a simple fact that the more you donate, the more program activity we can do. In essence, you make our important work for software freedom and rights.
Embroidery and resilient software freedom in 2025
by
on January 6, 2025CC-BY-NA 4.0 Sage Sharp
I spent most of 2024 recovering from a spine injury after a car accident. I’d love to share my new insight into free software accessibility, and how both free software and embroidery helped me build resiliency. I’ve been working on a special embroidery that I’ll send to a donor who gives to Software Freedom Conservancy on January 8. We hope if you are able to give you’ll consider donating!
Outreachy Team AMA
Please join me on January 8 for a Q&A session with the SFC staff and contractors who run the Outreachy internship program. After the Outreachy organizer Q&A, join me for a crafting session while I work on the SFC logo embroidery.
There will be two Q&A sessions with the Outreachy team to accommodate time zones. You can join us on BigBlueButton at the times below (information is also in the attached .ics files):
First chat on Wednesday:
- Wednesday 8 January 2025 at 9AM (09:00) US/Eastern (-0500)
- Wednesday 8 January 2025 at 6AM (06:00) US/Pacific (-0800)
- Wednesday 8 January 2025 at 3PM (06:00) Europe/Central (+0100)
- date -d "2025-01-08 14:00 UTC"
Second chat on Wednesday:
- Wednesday 8 January 2025 at 9PM (09:00) US/Eastern (-0500)
- Wednesday 8 January 2025 at 6PM (06:00) US/Pacific (-0800)
- Thursday 8 January 2025 at 1PM (13:00) Australia/East (+1100)
- date -d "2025-01-09 02:00 UTC"
My healing journey
In February 2024, my car was rear-ended. The impact damaged the nerves from my shoulder to my hand.
I had pain and tingling in my fingers for 6 months. Everything I touched felt like picking up a cactcus.
It was painful to type on a keyboard. Touching my phone, either to swipe or type, hurt.
This chronic pain made it hard to do my normal work tasks as Software Freedom Conservancy’s Senior Director of Diversity and Inclusion, and an organizer for Outreachy internships. Most free software communication happens via email or text chat. Which meant a whole lot of very painful typing for me.
Luckily, free and open source software helped me find a more accessible way to work. I dreaded looking for accessibility software because I knew it’s usually both expensive and proprietary. I was so excited to find speech to text free software like vosk for the Linux desktop. For my phone, I found sayboard, a speech to text Android keyboard that uses vosk.
Free software allowed me to switch away from using my hands to write, and towards using my voice to write. I wrote this email using those tools. I am so grateful to the free software developers who helped me avoid hand and shoulder pain.
Accessibility in FOSS
My injury also gave me a new perspective on the gaps in software accessibility best practices. Very few free software projects offer options to accommodate people who have pain whenever they touch a screen, use a keyboard, or click a mouse button.
Free software developers rarely think about how many actions it takes to do a particular task. How many mouse clicks does it take to find information on a website? How many phone screen touches does it take to use that new feature?
When I have to go through five software actions to do a task, my brain translates each mouse click, phone screen touch, and keyboard press into feeling like a needle is poking my finger. Extra actions to complete a task are literal pain points for me.
I encourage other free software developers to explore how many touches, clicks, or key presses it takes to do a common task. My fellow Outreachy organizer, Anna e só, mentioned there is a whole field of Human-Computer Interaction research around minimizing software task overhead.
I encourage other free software developers to study their project’s gulfs of evaluation and execution. Identifying the extra actions it takes to execute a task may help you understand how software contributes to chronic hand pain. Anna recommends reading the book “The Design of Everyday Things” by Donald A. Norman to get started learning about this field research.
Community support and accommodations
Even with somewhat improved free software accessibility, I still needed time to rest and recover. SFC staff and the Outreachy team helped me reassign tasks that required a lot of typing or mouse movement. They encouraged me to find verbal and audio-based work. I also shared knowledge and processes so that any team member could do critical tasks.
I am so grateful to SFC and the Outreachy team for their flexibility and accommodation of my short term disability.
While my body was healing, I thought a lot about the right to repair, both for software and for physical objects. Why do we decide an object is beyond repair, and must be replaced by something expensive and new? Why do companies put out products that easily break physically, or will become obsolete or insecure due to a lack of software updates?
In a world of shiny fragile tech toys and easy to consume fast fashion, I felt out of place. I felt like my healing body would be viewed as imperfect, broken, and disposable. I worried that opening up about my invisible disabilities would cause people to view me as needing to be replaced.
My identity as a free software contributor was so dependent on using my hands. My outdoor hobbies involved climbing over rocks or gripping a walking stick for a long time, both of which caused hand and back pain. Who was I, if I could not use my hands in ways I was used to?
Resiliency and Embroidery
While I was healing, I needed to be more gentle with my physical self. I also wanted a hobby that would help me rebuild my hand dexterity and nerve sensation. So I took up embroidery.
When it came time for the SFC fundraiser, I knew I couldn’t be on social media as much because it would cause additional hand and back pain to be so online. Instead I decided to create an embroidered art piece that would encourage people to donate to Software Freedom Conservancy.
Other SFC staff were excited about my embroidery project, and crafting became a theme for SFC’s fundraiser. SFC’s yearly post card features SFC’s tree logo re-imagined as a cross-stitch. We also created a special t-shirt design (available if you become a sustainer ) this year that features a work-in-progress cross-stitch of SFC’s logo. In both free software and crafting projects, there is always something to more improve or work on.
I’m so excited to send my embroidered art to an SFC donor. My embroidery is an artistic take on Software Freedom Conservancy’s tree logo. It features the words ‘Grow Software Freedom’, and ‘2024 Sustainer’.
A tree cannot thrive without good water and sunlight. SFC cannot thrive without your support. I encourage you to donate today at https://sfconservancy.org/sustainer/.
Donate for Embroidery
Your donation to Software Freedom Conservancy will help us grow software freedom together.
My embroidered art will go to the top donor SFC’s fundraiser, from the time you receive this email until end of day (AOE) on January 8th. If the top donor doesn’t want it, the art will go to a random donor, including anyone who donated from the start of Conservancy’s fundraiser through January 8th.
This means even if you can only give a smaller amount to support Conservancy, there is still a chance you may receive this SFC art. Every donation to SFC helps us sustain software freedom!
I hope you will take heart in my recovery journey. If it inspires you, please use that energy to support software freedom, especially the right to repair and accessibility.
I encourage you to donate to Software Freedom Conservancy to build the resilient future free software needs.
--
Sage Sharp
Senior Director of Diversity and Inclusion at Software Freedom Conservancy
Cultural Change Agent at Outreachy
Kuleana and software freedom for the future
by
on December 23, 2024Pono and Meredith in Hawai'i - CC-BY-NA 4.0 Pono Takamori
During the holiday season I really want to share with you some thoughts on why software freedom is so important to me. Please donate during our fundraiser (and have you donation doubled from our matchers!). Also please see the note at the bottom about 2 Q&A sessions we’ll be having on December 27th and 30th!
My name is Pono, a name my native Hawaiian grandmother gave me. In Hawaiian we have a word: kuleana. A duty to take care of the land and the people around you given your own gifts and abilities. It’s been an important concept to me to guide me and share my passions and desires for a better world with the community around me. I came to Software Freedom Conservancy first as a Sustainer and activist, and then years later an employee. Software Freedom is an interesting area to think about place, because the digital world sometimes feels like an astral plane, so distant from our everyday lives. But the reality is that we can inhabit the physical world and digital world at the same time. Whether it’s liberating farming equipment so that we can repair the software on tools vital for food production or making sure that the internet connected devices in our homes are not spying on us, our stewardship for the Earth and for the digital spaces we occupy are not distinct but intertwined.
My wife and I are expecting our first child soon. We’re so excited for the future and how the three of us will grow and experience the world together. And while software freedom certainly wasn’t the first thing on our minds in this situation, we’ve already encountered baby gear that is internet connected and has moved to subscription model for existing features (this article from The Register talks about it as well as the letter we signed to the FTC advocating against such technology). It’s frustrating the many ways that our technology is dictated to us, when it is from our own labor that all this technology is created in the first place [footnote]. What does software freedom look like to someone growing up in a world filled with proprietary cloud based software, an increasing surveillance state, and corporations seeking to lock you in the their walled gardens?
Working for Software Freedom Conservancy has been amazing to work with community to build our collective future. We focus on protecting technological rights that corporations continually belittle and seek to undermine. Working with such an incredibly passionate and small team is something that makes advocating for software freedom feel good. Our activism, while sometimes driven to fight back against unchecked power, has it’s roots in the joy and liberation of programming and cooperation of our digital activities. It’s a long road ahead, but we must remember that there is joy to be had along the way.
I’m sure by wishing my daughter has an interest in computers, she will wind up finding her joy somewhere else. But isn’t that what we want? Regardless of technical proficiency or interest, we want to guarantee rights for all people. My kuleana is knowing that I’ve been given abilities and an interest in computing; I have a responsibility to others to make sure they are afforded the same rights and privileges I’ve attained.
I’m so thankful for the opportunity to share my story and why I think software freedom is a necessary (if not sufficient) condition for human liberation. It's my humble ask to support our organization you spread the word and tell a friend or family member about what we do. But if you are able to give this season, your contribution will be doubled during our fundraiser :)
While the annual sustainership level is $128/year, you can make monthly donations and get all the benefits of sustaining SFC for lightly less (at just $10/month)!
We’d also like to invite you to a Q&A with our Executive Director Karen Sandler and Policy Fellow Bradley M. Kuhn on the evening of December 27th and morning of December 30th. Use the commands below to find your local time.
$ date -d "2024-12-27 14:00 UTC"
$ date -d "2024-12-31 02:00 UTC"
Join us in #conservancy on libera.chat or our XMPP channel at those times for the BigBlueButton link. Can’t wait to see you!
Maholo nui loa,
— Daniel Sean Pono Takamori
footnote: The Luddites get a bad rap, but they were the skilled laborers who fought against technology replacing them in a way that's very reminiscent to our own movement. I highly recommend Brian Merchant's book "Blood in the Machine: The Origins of the Rebellion Against Big Tech"
Matcher interview with Emily Dunham - 2024 Fundraiser
by
on December 19, 2024CC-BY-NA 4.0 Emily Dunham
Next up in our matcher interview series is Emily Dunham (edunham). Having been involved in free software for almost 20 years, her work has spanned all kinds of places from working at Mozilla with the Rust community to being a developer advocate and now being at Okta. Thanks to Emily for the incredible interview!
SFC: Tell us a bit about yourself! Where are you from, what are some of your hobbies?
edunham: I'm from the middle of nowhere, grew up off-grid in a tiny community where I still live and volunteer to this day. I've been working remotely in tech since around 2014, in various ops and automation roles for a series of Californian tech companies. I'm barely aware of how fundamentally this forestry-community upbringing shaped my worldview, except for how it causes the culture shock of bay-area thinkers being okay with planning only a year or a quarter ahead.
I have a rotating portfolio of hobbies where if I share about too many at once, it starts to sound like I'm exaggerating for comedic effect. Right now, in November of 2024, my free time is going to a combination of revisiting Skyrim Special Edition and addressing my backlog of "that seems like a neat idea, but..." topics with the fallible but well-read tutelage and co-thinking of claude.ai and, soon, local more-open models. (Claude is very helpful for bootstrapping into a toolchain to deliver similar benefits while being less at the mercy of some distant corporation choosing to keep offering it as a product, not unlike learning to brake and steer in an automatic vehicle before learning to drive a manual). There are a lot of surprises about AI that each individual who meets it has to have for themself at this moment in history, so I'm working on getting those out of the way without sounding too silly about it, because that seems like a prerequisite for making any useful contribution to our collective thought about and understanding of it. I'm quiet on the socials these days, but that might change as I continue building out the cognitive prosthetics to let me do more of the things I want to. I'm also halfway through a couple baby quilts for friends who are expecting next spring (if you're wondering, AI is unhelpful past the point of uselessness so far with quilting).
SFC: Why do you care about software freedom? How long have you been involved?
edunham: I care because it's good for me -- like I care about my garden because fresh veggies are delicious, or I care about keeping on top of routine maintenance around the house because it's super inconvenient to have to fix things if one lets them get to a point where they break.
I think everyone has their version of Stallman's printer story, and mine is the high school robotics team. We had these huge corporations throwing money and resources, especially "free" licenses for expensive software, at us left and right. This confused me, and I asked "why" enough times to eventually get the picture: They wanted us to build marketable job skills with specific proprietary technology so that we would go to employers and demand that they buy us a license for expensive proprietary software. They wanted us to invest our time in skills that they could then hold for ransom. We have plenty of mythology about the importance of thinking very carefully before entering that kind of contract with a more-powerful-than-human entity, so I thought through it carefully, and declined the offer.
My rule of thumb for investing time in learning a software tool is that I must be able to take that tool with me, online or offline. Software is cognitive prosthetics, and I'm lucky enough to have a choice among many options, unlike physical prosthetics like Karen's augmented heart. The tools I can keep with me through my life, without depending on money or an employer to maintain my access to the skills I've invested my own time in refining, tend to be free software.
SFC: How do you use free software in your life?
edunham: Free software is the invisible infrastructure that facilitates basically every benefit our species derives from computers. We hide it well, because free software often chooses raw power over generic usability -- it's like the logistics areas of an airport rather than the public spaces. But let's say I drive to the store to get some groceries. Maybe the traffic is bad, so I pull up google maps to get its opinion of the fastest route. First, I'm using an Android phone, so there's decades of Linux work underpinning its existence. But even on an iPhone, GPS "just works" and knows where the device is at by receiving signals from satellites and cell towers. How do those signals turn into a location? It's basically because all the devices agree on exactly what time it is, and they do that using the NTP stack and referencing public timeservers. (if you know with enough precision when a signal was sent and when it was received, and you know the speed at which it propagated, you know the distance it traveled. so from there it's just triangulation with multiple satellites or cell towers) Maybe I check my bank balance on my phone as I walk into the store, to make sure I know how much is in the account for the debit card I'll pay with later. My ability to do that safely instead of having my banking details easily stolen relies on encryption that's usually implemented using free software tools. And then the food at the store, from all over the world -- that got into the store through supply chains that use servers, databases, sometimes mainframes, and I'd challenge you to name any one of those systems with no load-bearing free software utility in its creation and maintenance. XKCD 2347 holds true. That's barely scratching the surface, as there's a whole lot more free software and right-to-repair concerns in growing the food before it even touches those systems!
SFC: On the spectrum on developer to end user, where do you lie? And how do you think we could do better bridging that divide?
edunham: The closest tech stereotype to how I relate to development is that of "ops guy". I love automation -- there's something so satisfying and grounded about working in a feedback loop where I am among my own customers. It often sidesteps that philosophical quagmire about what a more distant user's problem "really is" and when it's "really solved".
edunham: I think you could do better at reaching out to people so un-technical that they don't even realize they're the end users. You do targeted outreach to non-technical people in political positions of power, and I'll bet you're learning insights about what works and what doesn't that would scale excellently to the populations who vote for those people as representatives of their way of being. In other words, I suspect that your model of communicating with lawmakers has a lot of room for trying to scale to their constituencies.
SFC: What's got you most excited from the past year of our work?
edunham: Selfishly, you held FOSSY, which was like everything I missed out on by being a rural middle schooler during the early OSCON days. In the bigger picture, your DMCA work is ground-breaking, and the continued focus on right to repair should be of great interest to anyone who likes eating food that comes from farms where farmers wear these amazing mechanical exoskeletons of agricultural equipment to produce produce at a literally superhuman scale.
SFC: Do you think we are doing a good job reaching a wider audience and do you see us at places you expect?
edunham: I'm blissfully unaware of how wide an audience you reach. It's one of those problems where if nobody was successfully dealing with it, I'd feel like I "had to" help out more directly... but that kind of work is definitely not above the fold in my list of ways i'd rather be spending my time, so I'm grateful that you have it handled.
SFC: Have you been involved with any of our member projects in the past?
edunham: I'm doing this interview on an Etherpad as we speak, connecting using hardware running OpeWrt. I use Git on a daily basis to get my work done... Wine gives me games, Selenium gives me automation even when things don't offer a featureful api. I worked at the OSU OSL back in the day and did more direct ops support for some of the projects, but the intersection of my time availability, interests, and skillset doesn't have me contributing directly to any Conservancy projects at the moment.
SFC: How do you see our role amongst the various FLOSS organizations?
edunham: I get the luxury of not caring deeply about who does what role in the FLOSS organization landscape. I categorize you loosely as an organization that focuses on interfacing with the US government and helping it notice and course correct when it accidentally passes legislation that violates the principles on which it was founded. Translating modern tech concepts into "normal" human terms is really hard, especially when the people you're talking to might hold the belief that they already know the things which are worth knowing, so having as many unique approaches as possible to this challenge seems to bring far more value than trying to somehow consolidate them all. It's like by having a lot of organizations which each specialize in a high-impact area of opportunity, we demonstrate the engineering principle of building many simple utilities that excel at their tasks.
SFC: Do you think we do a good job standing up to the organizations with more corporate funding?
edunham: I think you do a good job of standing up to the organizations which are accidentally anti-freedom, and working within their worlds to explain how freedom is good actually. I hope you're not standing up to other software freedom organizations except when absolutely necessary, because the potential impact and good of working together is on a whole other scale from the potential good of infighting about less-important details.
SFC: What other organizations are you supporting this year?
edunham: I'm actually not that into the whole "donate money to charity" thing as a first line of social impact, because I'm uncomfortable with the harmonics of systems where giving money incentivizes asking for more money. I support my community by volunteering as an EMT and firefighter; I support local businesses by spending at them even when it's more expensive or less convenient than buying the same thing online. And I support roads and schools and stuff, along with the other side effects, by paying my taxes. But I happen to work at a larger corporation that offers a holiday giving match, and I strongly believe that corporations should do more to support the FOSS that they rely on, so what better way to combine these beliefs than leveraging their matching funds program to double a donation to Conservancy?
[1] 2