• Auzy@beehaw.org
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    4 months ago

    You’re actually wrong. They did when they started.

    I know because I donated

    The funny thing is that the people who complain most about stuff like this, tend to be the people who contribute the least.

    If you don’t like them making money to support development, you’re more than welcome to work full time on developing it for free

      • barsoap@lemm.ee
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        4 months ago

        Donations are a tiny fraction of Mozilla’s income. Firefox and related projects are their money earners for their actually charitable projects, pulling in at least half a billion or so a year.

        Not saying that the CEO pay is adequate or something, but your take is literally ignoring the article you yourself quoted.

      • Trainguyrom@reddthat.com
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        4 months ago

        Non-profits of the scale that Mozilla is need good talent to continue to exist. Good talent needs to be paid close to market rates to work for non-profits, and retaining good talent requires even better pay and benefits than just what will get good talent in the door

        No matter how much or how little the talent at a nonprofit is paid people will go “why are they paying the CEO a $1 million dollar salary? They could hire 6-8 developers for that much!” “Why are they paying developers 100k/year? Can’t they accept 80k for the privilege of working for such an important bastion of the open internet?”

        15 million a year is a lot but it’s also 1/3 the median CEO pay rate. They have to pay the CEO at least semi-competitively to retain them

      • Auzy@beehaw.org
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        4 months ago

        Rich guy?

        Presumably that is about Mitchell Baker… A woman… who was there since the beginning when the company was failing…

        The new CEO is also a woman and a temp CEO, who I’m guessing will again be replaced by an existing employee. Which guy are you referring to?

        What browser projects are you assisting with or donating to?

        Are you assisting with any open source projects at all?

        The biggest problem with the oss community is that as a developer, you need to accept always that you’ll get treated like absolute dirt by the community.

        One of my projects went FrontPage on many major Linux sites, and I ended up dropping it because I got tired of the abuse.

        You’ll get plenty of people contributing nothing to your project or competing ones, but they’ll tell you the 50 different ways you suck

        I donated back when Firefox was in beta. They were a dying company back then.

        Are you saying open source developers shouldn’t be rewarded at all?

    • jol@discuss.tchncs.de
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      4 months ago

      Ah interesting. I didn’t know. I started using Firefox as a kid around version 2.

      I totally want Firefox to make money, but I wonder if donations couldn’t be a significant part of that pie today. It seems a lot more people would prefer to donate to Firefox than Mozilla.

      • Auzy@beehaw.org
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        4 months ago

        Yeah. Maybe I’m just old (I’m 40).

        I would be happy to donate. But, the reality is… donations don’t work in my experience. One of my projects went FrontPage on all the major tech sites (and even was mentioned in Linux format magazine).

        I got $300 in donations.

        $250 was from a person I knew…

        Backend projects often get screwed more, and I guess you probably need to hope you get supported by companies like Redhat ultimately. This may be why in my case. But backend projects always have people dissing them (frontend projects just need to look good and markety)

        I think what’s more important is that it’s open source to be honest. We’re actually lucky we still have Mozilla honestly.

        In Mozilla browser days (after Netscape), id imagine it would have been a struggle to get a good pay. The people still there I suspect took a massive risk, and could have moved to lots of other companies like Google instead quite easily

        I think they deserve to get rewarded…