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- title: On the MediaGoblin fundraising campaign part 1: FSF vs Kickstarter
- date: 2012-10-16 13:30
- author: Christine Lemmer-Webber
- slug: mediagoblin-campaign
- ---
- <p>
- As those who have read my
- <a href="/blog/life_update_october_2012">previous</a> <a href="/blog/leaving-cc-to-work-on-mediagoblin">entries</a>
- know, I quit my job of three years as senior software engineer at
- <a href="http://creativecommons.org">Creative Commons</a>
- to pursue the free software project I've been running,
- <a href="http://mediagoblin.org/">MediaGoblin</a>. I'd explain a
- bit further what MediaGoblin is but actually there's no reason to:
- we're in the middle of running
- a <a href="http://mediagoblin.org/pages/campaign.html">fundraising
- campaign</a>, and we put a video together that explains everything
- wonderfully already. So what you really ought to do is click
- through to:
- </p>
- <p class="centered">
- <a href="http://mediagoblin.org/pages/campaign.html">
- <img src="/etc/images/blog/support_mediagoblin-blagpost.png" alt="Suport MediaGoblin image" />
- </a>
- </p>
- <p>
- Go ahead visit the above link! Check out the campaign! Watch the
- video! Donate! Excitedly link the campaign to your friends! Then
- come back here. I'll still be around.
- </p>
- <p>
- Okay, back? Awesome. So the campaign has gone live and is going
- well. It's been a major portion of my life the last couple of
- months. For the one and a half months leading up to the campaign,
- it <i>was</i> my life. And it still is. I stressed out about it
- all the way leading up to the campaign launch and I am, in fact,
- still stressing out about it now. But it's a good kind of stress.
- We're getting a lot of positive reactions from people, and I feel
- great about that. I really do believe that MediaGoblin is the most
- important thing I've ever worked on in my life, and so having this
- be a success is important to me. And having it be important to
- other people... well that's important to me, too.
- </p>
- <p>
- There's a couple of things that people have been asking me about
- related to the campaign. People seem fairly curious about the
- process of making the video and ramping up the campaign, and
- especially I keep getting asked, "Why did you go through the Free
- Software Foundation? Why not Kickstarter?" Those are both really
- good questions, so I'll take a shot at answering them.
- </p>
- <h2>Why the Free Software Foundation? Why not Kickstarter?</h2>
- <p><b>Kinda long, so here's a tl;dr:</b>
- <ul>
- <li>We don't dislike Kickstarter</li>
- <li>FSF offered for us to do the donation campaign through them;
- didn't have all the features we wanted, but were willing to
- implement them</li>
- <li>We decided to go with them because they threw their weight
- behind our campaign, because of their integrity, and because of our
- aligned ideals.</li>
- </ul>
- </p>
- <p>
- Let's go with this one first, because people seem so curious about
- it. What I'll first say was that this wasn't a decision we rushed
- into. A couple of months ago, I was in Boston and meeting with
- MediaGoblin co-conspirators
- <a href="http://bluesock.org/~willg/">Will Kahn-Greene</a> and
- <a href="http://www.eximiousproductions.com/">Deb Nicholson</a>
- about this. We were hanging out at and around the FSF offices. At
- that point, we knew we were launching a campaign, but didn't know
- the details. And this was a major point of discussion: do we go
- with Kickstarter, or we go with the Free Software Foundation? We
- did know was that John Sullivan had expressed interest in us doing
- things through the Free Software Foundation, and so that was an
- option.
- </p>
- <p>
- We chose the Free Software Foundation over Kickstarter for various
- reasons. The reason we didn't go with Kickstarter <i>isn't</i> that
- we dislike Kickstarter, or thought that it would be particularly bad
- for us. I actually think that Kickstarter is doing a good job in
- paving a way forward for projects to be funded in ways that frees
- them to focus on what they need to; if I have a major complaint,
- it's that I wish people would mostly hold projects to the standard
- that if they're donating to them, they shouldn't be locking down
- their stuff. If the public is funding you, doesn't it make sense
- that you are in a sense beholden to the public? I wish people would
- hold things they donate to to a standard where they encourage
- projects to adopt free licenses. But anyway, that's more of a wish
- that I wish we'd see <i>more</i> free software and free culture
- benefitting from Kickstarter like systems than something against
- Kickstarter. And Kickstarter was fairly tempting for various
- reasons: they've done a good job of proving themselves. We know
- their stuff works, it's fairly expected how stuff would run, and
- it's something people recognize and feel comfortable giving money
- to. My friend Aeva said, "When I see something on Kickstarter, I
- have a temptation to just throw money at it." So not choosing
- Kickstarter would mean leaving a lot of that behind.
- </p>
- <p>
- So why <i>did</i> we choose the Free Software Foundation?
- There was reason to be cautious about it: we knew what to expect if
- we went with Kickstarter. While I have a lot of trust in the Free
- Software Foundation, we couldn't be sure how things would work out
- running a campaign like this because they simply hadn't done such a
- thing before. We had done something similar with the FSF with
- <a href="http://lpc.opengameart.org">Liberated Pixel Cup</a>, but it
- wasn't on this scale. When we met with John, we listed a series of
- things that we'd still need: we needed the ability for the system to
- offer rewards (such as the 3d model, t-shirt, etc options we have
- now), we needed the ability to theme the campaign page, we needed to
- be able to email people who donated with updates as the campaign
- progressed, we needed the form to work this way and that, we needed
- a progress bar that updated automatically each time someone donated,
- and so on. The FSF didn't have a way set up to do these things yet,
- and we wanted to go live with the campaign in a month and a half.
- Would the FSF be able to do it on time? Would the FSF want to do
- it? John said that he thought so, and yes. This was a direction
- that they were interested in going in, both for themselves and
- likely for future projects, so it was a good opportunity for them to
- push their systems in that direction.
- </p>
- <p>
- At that point, we decided to go with the FSF. First of all, the
- fact that this was a new thing but that the FSF was interested in
- pushing in this direction means there'd be a certain kind of
- guinea-pig uncertainty, but it also meant something else: the FSF
- had a lot of faith in MediaGoblin and were willing to throw their
- weight behind it. That meant a lot, and also meant something
- strategically: there's a lot of projects swimming around on
- Kickstarter and etc right now, and it would be easy to get lost in
- that pool. The fact that the FSF was willing to back us meant that
- we'd stand out in a certain way, at least to a certain audience.
- And we could benefit from their connections and experience.
- </p>
- <p>
- There's another aspect to it too: the FSF is a nonprofit. I'm not
- sure whether this is resonating with donors or not, but at least to
- me, it's significant: the FSF is an organization that has a mission
- and integrity. By going through the FSF, we are also beholden to
- that mission and integrity. The FSF wasn't going to just toss all
- the money raised by this project over to us: we had to show that we
- were doing the work to advance the project to get it. To me, that
- seems like a feature, at least one that's donor-facing (though I'm
- not sure whether or not people are picking up on that). You
- can have whatever opinion you want about the FSF, but one thing is
- indisputable, maybe even above any other org I know of: they stick
- with their principles. And I hope that message that the FSF was
- backing us passed on to people. And to some people, it seemed to.
- (I guess also, if you go through a nonprofit, donations are
- tax-deductable. Some people seem to appreciate that.) The FSF is
- also taking an "administrative cut", just as Kickstarter would, of
- the money raised. I think it's also significant that the
- organization that gets that cut be one who's working to advance
- things that I believe in.
- </p>
- <p>
- There were some other benefits too: we had a lot more control over
- our site design by doing things on our own (and MediaGoblin's
- usual graphic designer, Jef van Schendel, was commissioned to do the
- design of the campaign site, and did an awesome job). But... I
- think the being endorsed by an organization with that kind of trust
- and integrity was the most important thing. And I'll also admit
- that there is an element of personal interest here: is it possible
- for a nonprofit to reproduce the same kind of experience that
- Kickstarter has? Because that's significant to me. And one thing
- that <i>would</i> come out of this is that the FSF would be using
- free software to run the campaign also. The thing is mostly run by
- CiviCRM, so unlike Kickstarter, advancements gained in running it
- could benefit the software and other people running such software.
- And if we could prove that this works, that would be good.
- </p>
- <p>
- That said, even after we made that decision, even though I have a
- strong amount of trust in the FSF, the proof of the pudding is in
- the eating, and I couldn't be anything but nervous about things
- until the campaign actually went live. I'm happy to say that things
- did work out and we had a successful launch. People seem very
- responsive to our campaign, and the FSF's stuff is working great.
- And the FSF really <i>has</i> thrown themselves behind the campaign.
- I've been working with both people from the FSF systems team and
- especially John Sullivan and Zak Rogoff, one of the new campaigns
- team members (who's really been a pleasure to work with so far).
- They really have been trying hard to make this a success, and I'm
- really pleased with it.
- </p>
- <p>
- We've had a good start, but we've still got a long way to go. But
- one thing's for sure, the campaign is only going to be a success if
- people like
- you <a href="http://mediagoblin.org/pages/campaign.html">pitch in
- and spread the word about the campaign</a>. So please help... and
- spread the word!
- </p>
- <p>
- And I guess that blogpost was long enough, so the "making of the
- campaign" will have to be a part two!
- </p>
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