Funding Model

Resolution:

Proposal:

A majority vote of the current board members is required for this matter.

  1. Adoption of the procedure described below for handling fundraisers and funded development work.

  2. Board chairman will document this procedure on the Inkscape website, and announce to the developer and user mailing lists.

[See Appendix B for changes made based on feedback from Inkscape community.]
Inkscape Funded Development Model ———————————
1. Fundraising

Using the model we’ll describe below, anyone may start an official fundraiser for Inkscape development. We leave it to your imagination how to structure and run your fundraising campaign, and empower you with selecting from a list of defined development goals to fund, so long as a few requirements are met.

The person who organizes and supervises a fundraising campaign is termed a Fundraising Coordinator. We may have multiple coordinators if we have multiple campaigns, but only one coordinator per fundraiser. They have three duties:

  1. Administration of the fundraiser
  2. Allocate raised funds to projects
  3. (Optionally) Be involved in final signoff of completed projects

The first duty is left to the Fundraising Coordinator’s discretion.

The second duty should be straightforward. When the fundraiser is completed, all funds must be allocated to one or more projects in the official Jobs List. No guarantee is made that any given project will be undertaken if there is insufficient developer interest, but future fundraisers can up the funds allocated to it to stimulate interest.

We expect some campaigns will wish to target one or more specific projects, and announce this upfront to stimulate donations. This is fine to do, but keep in mind that projects can change (or get implemented) while the campaign is under way. So instead of naming specific projects, it may be better to describe the types of projects the campaign is aiming to fund, and make the specific decision(s) when the fundraiser is over.

For ongoing fundraisers, the coordinator responsible for setting it up can specify the distribution programmatically (e.g. “distribute evenly to the four oldest projects in the list as of the end of the campaign”, or “10% to each of the ten projects with the highest funding from past campaigns”, or “allocated evenly across all documentation projects registered as of the start of this campaign”. The coordinator will remain responsible for administrative duties both during and after the fundraiser. Should they need to step down, they may name a replacement to hand the remaining duties down to. If they disappear without naming a replacement, or if there are any other irregularities or questions, the issue should be escalated to the Inkscape Board for resolution.

The third duty - signing off on completion of the project - is described in more detail below. The Fundraising Coordinator can’t do this if they personally contribute most of the funding, because it’d run us afoul of IRS rules.

2. Proposing New Projects

We maintain a listing of proposed (unfunded) projects. Anything can be proposed, including feature development, bug triaging, documentation, administration, etc. but it must include a detailed description (>100 words) of the work to be done. Anyone may adopt these projects as regular (unfunded) development tasks, GSoC projects, etc. (This is so that any proposed projects that are fun or easy get done by volunteers, and money can be focused on harder unsexy work, and to make abuse harder.)

Once a proposed project has reached a certain age, it will be eligible for funding. We’ll call these eligible projects ‘jobs’, once they meet the following conditions:

  1. Has been on the Proposed Projects list for >=6 months
  2. A Deliverable has been defined
  3. Acceptance Criteria has been defined (see appendix)
  4. A Time Limit has been estimated for how long the work should take
  5. Proposal has been Seconded by another Developer that the proposed change is, in concept, worth including in the Inkscape codebase

Once a proposal meets all 5 of these conditions it is considered an Approved Job.

3. Fundable Jobs List

The money from these fundraisers goes to the Inkscape Foundation account administered by the Software Freedom Conservancy, who takes a small percentage of each donation. Conservancy is a US 501(c)(3) public charity, and all donations are tax deductible in the United States as allowed by law.

We maintain a list of allocations-to-jobs so we can keep track of what money “belongs” to which job, so the correct amount is paid when the job is done. This amount is displayed on the web for developers to browse when selecting a job to do.

Only people registered in the Inkscape AUTHORS file are eligible to apply for a job. The applicant must submit a Job Proposal, which will identify the applicant’s qualifications for doing the job, and outline how they intend to do the implementation.

The Inkscape Board will delegate one of its members to review and vet applicants to help ensure the best candidates are selected for each job. For larger, longer, or more complicated jobs the vetting may take some time, but for moderate sized jobs the intent is for a decision to be made within a few days. The Inkscape Board may elect to mark some jobs (such as smaller ones) as Pre-Approved; once an applicant files an application they may begin the job immediately, no vetting required. Board members are excepted from this process due to conflict of interest; they may apply for the jobs but must still be vetted. No one may assign themselves more than one Pre-Approved job at a time, and the Board reserves the right to subsequently review the application and disapprove it in case of problems.

When an applicant is assigned the job, the clock starts ticking. The applicant must post at least one progress report each month (e.g. to a blog or to the Inkscape wiki). During the time limit, so long as the monthly reports are being clearly posted, no one else can apply to do the same job. If two months pass without a report, or when the 6 months time runs out, and the job is not completed, the assignee doesn’t receive the funds and can’t attempt the same job again for 6 months. The job is considered completed when the identified deliverables are delivered according to the specified criteria.

4. Completion Criteria

The Reviewer makes the decision as to whether the job has been adequately completed, using the originally specified criteria.

By default, the Fundraising Coordinator is the Reviewer; if the project was funded from multiple sources, the one that allocated the largest amount of funding (or their chosen delegate) is the Reviewer. This person must formally accept the Reviewer role by email within 1 week. For any reason, they may opt to decline the Reviewer role. If they are unresponsive or opt to decline the role, it passes to the next Fundraising Coordinator. If no Fundraising Coordinators take or delegate the role, then the Inkscape Board will delegate a Reviewer.

However the Reviewer is decided, he or she must be a different person than the original Project Proposer, and neither the Reviewer nor the Reviewer’s employer may contribute more than 50% of the total funds for the given project. We want to avoid a situation where a person or their employer has an independent business interest in seeing the job completed, and is over-involved in the management of the work.

5. Termination and Modification

The original proposer of the Project or Job may withdraw it or modify its definition at any time, so long as someone is not signed up for it. If the Project is withdrawn, all funds allocated to it return to the general Inkscape fund.

Unassigned Jobs expire 24 months after their initial project proposal. This is intended to clear out deadwood projects and to encourage developers to adopt projects with allocated funds before they expire, and to discourage proposing projects that are unlikely to get attention in 24 months. Any funds allocated to untaken jobs are moved to Inkscape’s general fund.

At its discretion, by majority vote the board may elect to extend the expiration date of about-to-expire Jobs with funds allocated by 12 months.

6. Process Exceptions

Historically, all development work funded by the Inkscape Project required authorization by the Inkscape Board of Directors; this funding model is to establish a structure for development funding that does not require Board involvement. However, the Board retains the ability to authorize exceptions for anything outside the bounds of this policy, to be handled on a case-by-case basis, with decisions made by a majority vote.

In particular, the Board may select by vote certain projects to be immediately fundable, without needing to wait the normal 6 month period. They may also withdraw any project or job at any time, by majority vote, including even assigned, in-progress jobs (though this should be highly unusual).

The Board may also make changes to this policy via a normal majority vote.

7. Conflict Resolution

If there are any problems or disagreements once a project has been assigned to a Developer, a Meeting can be called by any stakeholder (Project Proposer, Developer, Fundraising Campaigns, Reviewer, or Inkscape Board Member). For proper quorum, at a minimum the Meeting must be attended by the Developer, either the Project Proposer or the Reviewer, at least one Fundraising Coordinator involved in the funding of the project, any one Board Member, and a Colleague Developer (whom can be anyone in the Inkscape AUTHORS file selected by the Developer). Any unanimous decision reached in this Meeting is binding on all parties.

Any conflict that can’t be resolved via a Meeting may then be escalated to the Inkscape Board of Directors, who will be the ultimate arbiter.

Conflicts of interest, including conflicts with the board, are governed by the Software Freedom Conservancy’s org-wide conflict of interest policy.

Appendix A: Example Delivery and Acceptance Criteria

This is a sample set of delivery and acceptance criteria; each project

may use, alter, or replace any of these conditions as appropriate.

  1. Test cases are provided to add coverage for all newly added functionality.

  2. Documentation patches provided for describing all newly added functionality.

  3. Updates provided for release notes, NEWS, bug reports, etc.

  4. All patch(es) have landed in the official upstream repository. Either in the mainline tree, or in an officially designated branch as per upstream policy.

  5. Code builds and runs on the major platforms supported by the project.

  6. Code passes the upstream project’s designated style/lint checking tools.

  7. User-visible strings are translatable as per project policy.

  8. Unit and regression test suites pass with no new test failures.

At project completion, once the above criteria is met, 70% of the payable funds are delivered. 30% is held in reserve for bug fix followup: One month after completion, a list of identified bugs can be specified by the Reviewer to be fixed; if all are fixed within a month, the remaining 30% of the funding is released to the developer. If no bugs exist, or none are specified before 6 weeks after completion, then the developer is paid the remainder directly.

Appendix B: Changelog

Changes v6

Changes v5

Changes v4:

Changes v3:

Changes v2:


Announcement

Subject: New funded development and fundraising policy

Earlier this year we developed a policy for fundraising and for funding development work on Inkscape. Thanks to everyone that helped on this! Now that the policy is fully official I’ve given it a spot on our website.

http://inkscape.org/en/contribute/funded-devel

The intent of this is to delegate power to community members to organize fundraisers and use the gained monies for paid development.

This isn’t the only way we can do fundraisers or paid development, but other things will require more direct board involvement. Hopefully this will give us a more streamlined approach.

Bryce