also sprach Mehdi Dogguy <me...@dogguy.org> [2015-03-15 00:02 +0100]: > Can you please explain why you think that kind of work cannot ever > be achieved with volunteers? Or, maybe I missed your point?
I assume that everyone volunteering for Debian is primarily doing so out of interest in the project, community, technology, and philosophy. I don't know of any volunteer who's primary attraction to Debian is the ability to work on financials and paperwork. Over the years, we've come by, but I think we're missing opportunities. We have a few people graciously donating their time to do they best they can, but in all these years, we have not managed to ever produce an annual report, and Lucas as current DPL had to admit that noone has a firm grasp of the big picture. If you were to lead a company like that, you'd be in trouble. The kind of work I am talking about is repetitive, dull, error-prone, and deadline-based. It does not slot in with "when it's ready" and it's not the kind of work a hobbyist just does on the side with a spreadsheet or org-mode. We could free our volunteers from having to use their time to do this work just to get by and instead let those with an interest in money flows and finances work on growing a cash flow. Let the books and treasury be done in the backoffice, not by people who'd use their time for the project differently, but by those who do this all the time, for their jobs. These are standard tasks with standard interfaces and neither would we grow dependent on any service provider (they can be swapped with ease), nor do we actually need to care about how they do it. > Or maybe a better idea would be to create an external project that > would offer this kind of services to free and open source > projects? Admittedly, SPI matches this description. Can you > explain what you do not like with their approach? I have no problems with their approach, but they are a fundraising partner and a bank. They do not offer controlling and treasury services to Debian. If you wanted to create an external project, you'd create a whole lot of additional administrative work. How would you fund that? How would you staff it? > Besides, Why do you think it will more effective than the current > status when uncertainty about finances also comes from TOs > statuses? Fully agreed, and I'd hope that we would put clear guidelines in place and not be afraid to remove TO status and demand our assets back. We trust the people involved not to do misappropriate our assets (though we might well not know if they did, even erroneously so), but the 'T' in TO does not describe this sort of trust. Instead, when it comes to a trusted organisation that manages finances, I'd argue that uncertainty should immediately trigger an audit. -- .''`. martin f. krafft <madduck@d.o> @martinkrafft : :' : proud Debian developer `. `'` http://people.debian.org/~madduck `- Debian - when you have better things to do than fixing systems "the only thing that sustains one through life is the consciousness of the immense inferiority of everybody else, and this is a feeling that I have always cultivated." -- oscar wilde
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