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Bitcoin => Bitcoin Discussion => Topic started by: paulie_w on September 06, 2012, 01:10:17 AM



Title: why aren't we, the community, regularly paying the lead developers of bitcoin?
Post by: paulie_w on September 06, 2012, 01:10:17 AM
it just occurred to me that we have this crazy flexibility with this stuff.

insert fry pic "take my money, please"


Title: Re: why aren't we, the community, regularly paying the lead developers of bitcoin?
Post by: onesalt on September 06, 2012, 01:11:45 AM
... Why... Should we?


Title: Re: why aren't we, the community, regularly paying the lead developers of bitcoin?
Post by: ZodiacDragon84 on September 06, 2012, 01:12:55 AM
how do you know some people don't?


Title: Re: why aren't we, the community, regularly paying the lead developers of bitcoin?
Post by: paulie_w on September 06, 2012, 01:13:32 AM
maybe some of them would like to work full-time on it?

and besides, couldn't they hire more people with that money? what other open source project even has this possibility!?


Title: Re: why aren't we, the community, regularly paying the lead developers of bitcoin?
Post by: paulie_w on September 06, 2012, 01:14:12 AM
how do you know some people don't?

i don't. but it just occurred to me that we can do this. like, we can actually boost the productivity of the whole fucking game by... you know, being a little recursive. :-)


Title: Re: why aren't we, the community, regularly paying the lead developers of bitcoin?
Post by: ZodiacDragon84 on September 06, 2012, 01:17:52 AM
All you need to do, Is goto the github repository or wiki, that shows all the developers, find them on the forums here, and see if they have their bitcoin addy posted for donations.


Title: Re: why aren't we, the community, regularly paying the lead developers of bitcoin?
Post by: paulie_w on September 06, 2012, 01:19:54 AM
All you need to do, Is goto the github repository or wiki, that shows all the developers, find them on the forums here, and see if they have their bitcoin addy posted for donations.

i was thinking more like a wikipedia thermometer.

"we have our fill for this month"


Title: Re: why aren't we, the community, regularly paying the lead developers of bitcoin?
Post by: Bitcoin Oz on September 06, 2012, 01:24:16 AM
https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=92684.0  thats partly why I set this up.


Title: Re: why aren't we, the community, regularly paying the lead developers of bitcoin?
Post by: paulie_w on September 06, 2012, 01:25:18 AM
dude, great idea and great work.


Title: Re: why aren't we, the community, regularly paying the lead developers of bitcoin?
Post by: repentance on September 06, 2012, 01:45:56 AM
It's a legitimate question.  Square has attracted over $200 million dollars in venture capital in the two years since it was launched and is now being used at Starbucks.  Dwolla has also attracted major investors and become a viable alternative to PayPal. 

There are payment systems coming out right and left which are getting serious development funding and merchant adoption, yet there's really no serious money being directed towards solving the issues which create barriers to Bitcoin's acceptance as an alternative, mainstream payment method. People are expected to put time and effort into solving those issues out of idealism, which puts Bitcoin behind the other technologies which are targeting similar markets.

Bitcoin is not "user-friendly" for conventional business at the moment and it's not going to enjoy wide-spread adoption while it's cumbersome to acquire, to store, to spend or to exchange.  It's not going to become user-friendly any time soon unless people are paid to develop solutions.


Title: Re: why aren't we, the community, regularly paying the lead developers of bitcoin?
Post by: justusranvier on September 06, 2012, 01:56:59 AM
People are being paid to develop solutions  - they just work for a collection of companies like Mt Gox, BitInstant, Paysisus, BitPay, etc.

That being said community funding of the core developers isn't a bad idea.


Title: Re: why aren't we, the community, regularly paying the lead developers of bitcoin?
Post by: 2112 on September 06, 2012, 02:06:20 AM
Bitcoin is not "user-friendly" for conventional business at the moment and it's not going to enjoy wide-spread adoption while it's cumbersome to acquire, to store, to spend or to exchange.  It's not going to become user-friendly any time soon unless people are paid to develop solutions.
This has nothing to do with being "user-friendly" and 100% with the attitude of the core development group:

1) check out http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=koIq58UoNfE
about 1:25 into the clip:

we don't much care if you don't approve of the software we write.

2) utter disregard for the GAAP; check out the old thread

https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=93502.0

It just too bad that the juiciest portions were deleted by Maged at the request of Gavin Andresen and Roman Shtylman.


Title: Re: why aren't we, the community, regularly paying the lead developers of bitcoin?
Post by: paulie_w on September 06, 2012, 02:07:04 AM
repentance is on the mark.

can we get gavin and the other guys in here to comment on this?

i know that gavin is a self-made man and doesn't need it for himself right now, but that maybe doesn't apply to some people he'd like to have involved, or others on the team right now.

and if there's such a thing as mob rule or voting: the first non-core thing that should happen is that a UX/UI designer is hired to improve the aesthetics of the satoshi client. :-)



Title: Re: why aren't we, the community, regularly paying the lead developers of bitcoin?
Post by: paulie_w on September 06, 2012, 02:08:18 AM
Bitcoin is not "user-friendly" for conventional business at the moment and it's not going to enjoy wide-spread adoption while it's cumbersome to acquire, to store, to spend or to exchange.  It's not going to become user-friendly any time soon unless people are paid to develop solutions.
This has nothing to do with being "user-friendly" and 100% with the attitude of the core development group:

1) check out http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=koIq58UoNfE
about 1:25 into the clip:

we don't much care if you don't approve of the software we write.

2) utter disregard for the GAAP; check out the old thread

https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=93502.0

It just too bad that the juiciest portions were deleted by Maged at the request of Gavin Andresen and Roman Shtylman.

remember that gavin has said elsewhere on this forum, that they just see the satoshi client as a proof-of-concept, nothing more. i think the future is in the alt. clients, and i guess that opinion is shared with them.

still, it IS the first one people download from bitcoin.org and that should either change or the damn thing should be nicer to use.

money!


Title: Re: why aren't we, the community, regularly paying the lead developers of bitcoin?
Post by: repentance on September 06, 2012, 02:10:12 AM
Bitcoin is not "user-friendly" for conventional business at the moment and it's not going to enjoy wide-spread adoption while it's cumbersome to acquire, to store, to spend or to exchange.  It's not going to become user-friendly any time soon unless people are paid to develop solutions.
This has nothing to do with being "user-friendly" and 100% with the attitude of the core development group:

1) check out http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=koIq58UoNfE
about 1:25 into the clip:

we don't much care if you don't approve of the software we write.

2) utter disregard for the GAAP; check out the old thread

https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=93502.0

It just too bad that the juiciest portions were deleted by Maged at the request of Gavin Andresen and Roman Shtylman.

The devs aren't the only people who can come up with things like ways to compress the blockchain, for instance - there's just not a whole lot of incentive for other people to do it.


Title: Re: why aren't we, the community, regularly paying the lead developers of bitcoin?
Post by: paulie_w on September 06, 2012, 02:15:28 AM
Quote
The devs aren't the only people who can come up with things like ways to compress the blockchain, for instance - there's just not a whole lot of incentive for other people to do it.

exactly.

i think this would be a really important move by the community. we should be putting our money where it counts.

besides:

better software = more users = higher value and utility of btc


Title: Re: why aren't we, the community, regularly paying the lead developers of bitcoin?
Post by: Steve on September 06, 2012, 02:15:49 AM
I think the best way to do this is for someone to plan a specific project for a specific feature or enhancement.  Estimate the amount of money to get a specific developer or two to work on it and be able to complete it.  Then use a dominance assurance contract to try and raise the necessary funding (the project lead would get a portion of the revenue as well and would be incentivized to market the project and raise the funds).  The person leading it could solicit four or five ideas, try and figure out which one is most likely to get funding (polls, talking to devs, etc), and then focus on the top idea.

I actually think the software industry will move to this model of funding as a better, more efficient alternative to copyright and licensing.  If someone made this work for Bitcoin development (building the necessary infrastructure along the way), there's no reason it couldn't be used for building all sorts of things (and I would love to be an investor in such a company).


Title: Re: why aren't we, the community, regularly paying the lead developers of bitcoin?
Post by: paulie_w on September 06, 2012, 02:19:42 AM
what is a dominance assurance?


Title: Re: why aren't we, the community, regularly paying the lead developers of bitcoin?
Post by: Gavin Andresen on September 06, 2012, 02:28:06 AM
remember that gavin has said elsewhere on this forum, that they just see the satoshi client as a proof-of-concept, nothing more.

I've said that I think the download-and-install-software-on-your-PC is a mostly-dead way of using software, and that the vast majority of people using Bitcoin in a year or three will be using it via a web application or on their smart phone. That's half of the reason why I don't think improving the UI is a high priority right now (the other half is because I think solving wallet security and backup issues is critical).

RE: 2112 and GAAP:  "patches welcome."  I don't know nuthin about GAAP, so if you're complaining that the reference implementation doesn't adhere to them then I'm not surprised. Feel free to fix that, or write a detailed proposal on what's wrong, why it'll cause problems, and how it ought to be fixed.

RE: funding development: funding open source software projects is tricky; if done poorly you end up with a couple of paid developers and lots of disappointed unpaid former contributors who decide "I'm not gonna work if I'm not gonna get paid."

That said... stay tuned, and I'll say more when I can.


Title: Re: why aren't we, the community, regularly paying the lead developers of bitcoin?
Post by: paulie_w on September 06, 2012, 02:29:02 AM
oh my god we just figured out the announcement!


Title: Re: why aren't we, the community, regularly paying the lead developers of bitcoin?
Post by: Steve on September 06, 2012, 02:38:50 AM
what is a dominance assurance?
http://lmgtfy.com/?q=dominance+assurance+contract


Title: Re: why aren't we, the community, regularly paying the lead developers of bitcoin?
Post by: Daily Anarchist on September 06, 2012, 03:01:30 AM
It's a legitimate question.  Square has attracted over $200 million dollars in venture capital in the two years since it was launched and is now being used at Starbucks.  Dwolla has also attracted major investors and become a viable alternative to PayPal. 

There are payment systems coming out right and left which are getting serious development funding and merchant adoption, yet there's really no serious money being directed towards solving the issues which create barriers to Bitcoin's acceptance as an alternative, mainstream payment method. People are expected to put time and effort into solving those issues out of idealism, which puts Bitcoin behind the other technologies which are targeting similar markets.

Bitcoin is not "user-friendly" for conventional business at the moment and it's not going to enjoy wide-spread adoption while it's cumbersome to acquire, to store, to spend or to exchange.  It's not going to become user-friendly any time soon unless people are paid to develop solutions.

The reason Bitcoin is the future isn't because of its efficiency. Things like square are mere bandaids for a dying system. The reason Bitcoin will trump everything else is because it is a sound currency, unlike all things fiat.


Title: Re: why aren't we, the community, regularly paying the lead developers of bitcoin?
Post by: paulie_w on September 06, 2012, 03:24:52 AM
It's a legitimate question.  Square has attracted over $200 million dollars in venture capital in the two years since it was launched and is now being used at Starbucks.  Dwolla has also attracted major investors and become a viable alternative to PayPal. 

There are payment systems coming out right and left which are getting serious development funding and merchant adoption, yet there's really no serious money being directed towards solving the issues which create barriers to Bitcoin's acceptance as an alternative, mainstream payment method. People are expected to put time and effort into solving those issues out of idealism, which puts Bitcoin behind the other technologies which are targeting similar markets.

Bitcoin is not "user-friendly" for conventional business at the moment and it's not going to enjoy wide-spread adoption while it's cumbersome to acquire, to store, to spend or to exchange.  It's not going to become user-friendly any time soon unless people are paid to develop solutions.

The reason Bitcoin is the future isn't because of its efficiency. Things like square are mere bandaids for a dying system. The reason Bitcoin will trump everything else is because it is a sound currency, unlike all things fiat.

that has nothing to do with what he's talking about.


Title: Re: why aren't we, the community, regularly paying the lead developers of bitcoin?
Post by: Daily Anarchist on September 06, 2012, 03:30:22 AM
It's a legitimate question.  Square has attracted over $200 million dollars in venture capital in the two years since it was launched and is now being used at Starbucks.  Dwolla has also attracted major investors and become a viable alternative to PayPal. 

There are payment systems coming out right and left which are getting serious development funding and merchant adoption, yet there's really no serious money being directed towards solving the issues which create barriers to Bitcoin's acceptance as an alternative, mainstream payment method. People are expected to put time and effort into solving those issues out of idealism, which puts Bitcoin behind the other technologies which are targeting similar markets.

Bitcoin is not "user-friendly" for conventional business at the moment and it's not going to enjoy wide-spread adoption while it's cumbersome to acquire, to store, to spend or to exchange.  It's not going to become user-friendly any time soon unless people are paid to develop solutions.

The reason Bitcoin is the future isn't because of its efficiency. Things like square are mere bandaids for a dying system. The reason Bitcoin will trump everything else is because it is a sound currency, unlike all things fiat.

that has nothing to do with what he's talking about.

The point I clearly didn't make is that it's no surprise that Starbucks accepts things like Square because those are just improved technologies propping up the status quo.

Bitcoin is helping to build an entirely new economic model from the ground up.


Title: Re: why aren't we, the community, regularly paying the lead developers of bitcoin?
Post by: repentance on September 06, 2012, 03:47:33 AM


The point I clearly didn't make is that it's no surprise that Starbucks accepts things like Square because those are just improved technologies propping up the status quo.

Bitcoin is helping to build an entirely new economic model from the ground up.

Square plans to disrupt the retail payments market.  Merchant acceptance is what will bring users onboard.  There's no expensive infrastructue so merchants can adopt it with little risk.  It's becoming a common strategy.

Bitcoin will only ever be a niche currency until it's user-friendly - no matter how sound it is.  It could be being used as a leap frog technology in developing nations right now if it wasn't so cumbersome.  More user-friendly systems requiring only a smartphone already exist - Bitcoin needs to lift its game if it wants to compete in the payments market and not just be a speculative commodity until something shinier comes along.


Title: Re: why aren't we, the community, regularly paying the lead developers of bitcoin?
Post by: finkleshnorts on September 06, 2012, 04:03:29 AM
check out http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=koIq58UoNfE
about 1:25 into the clip:

we don't much care if you don't approve of the software we write.

Well folks, that is how you spin a quote out of context.


Title: Re: why aren't we, the community, regularly paying the lead developers of bitcoin?
Post by: Yankee (BitInstant) on September 06, 2012, 04:06:00 AM

That said... stay tuned, and I'll say more when I can.


oh my god we just figured out the announcement!



Title: Re: why aren't we, the community, regularly paying the lead developers of bitcoin?
Post by: finkleshnorts on September 06, 2012, 04:08:59 AM

That said... stay tuned, and I'll say more when I can.


oh my god we just figured out the announcement!


A government is funding bitcoin development!

ITS CANADA!!!!


Title: Re: why aren't we, the community, regularly paying the lead developers of bitcoin?
Post by: Yankee (BitInstant) on September 06, 2012, 04:09:51 AM

That said... stay tuned, and I'll say more when I can.


oh my god we just figured out the announcement!


A government is funding bitcoin development!

ITS CANADA!!!!

lol you guessed it...Somalia decided to fund Bitcoin  ;)


Title: Re: why aren't we, the community, regularly paying the lead developers of bitcoin?
Post by: finkleshnorts on September 06, 2012, 04:11:29 AM
Haha who's the big backer? Some crazy old people organization? A politcal party? A rebellious business (virgin or ryanair?)?


Title: Re: why aren't we, the community, regularly paying the lead developers of bitcoin?
Post by: Bitcoin Oz on September 06, 2012, 04:12:40 AM

That said... stay tuned, and I'll say more when I can.


oh my god we just figured out the announcement!


A government is funding bitcoin development!

ITS CANADA!!!!

The US has a secret government run by the CIA  :D

Plus they have a venture capital firm for it.


Title: Re: why aren't we, the community, regularly paying the lead developers of bitcoin?
Post by: paulie_w on September 06, 2012, 04:33:03 AM
I've said that I think the download-and-install-software-on-your-PC is a mostly-dead way of using software, and that the vast majority of people using Bitcoin in a year or three will be using it via a web application or on their smart phone. That's half of the reason why I don't think improving the UI is a high priority right now (the other half is because I think solving wallet security and backup issues is critical).

people have been saying that for years and years already. i hope it isn't true.


Title: Re: why aren't we, the community, regularly paying the lead developers of bitcoin?
Post by: The_Duke on September 06, 2012, 06:28:22 AM
Haha who's the big backer? Some crazy old people organization? A politcal party? A rebellious business (virgin or ryanair?)?

Somalia = Pirate(s). Guess it all makes sense now.


Title: Re: why aren't we, the community, regularly paying the lead developers of bitcoin?
Post by: repentance on September 06, 2012, 06:44:11 AM
I've said that I think the download-and-install-software-on-your-PC is a mostly-dead way of using software, and that the vast majority of people using Bitcoin in a year or three will be using it via a web application or on their smart phone. That's half of the reason why I don't think improving the UI is a high priority right now (the other half is because I think solving wallet security and backup issues is critical).

people have been saying that for years and years already. i hope it isn't true.

I think Gavin's essentially right about the future of software but has over-estimated the time-frame.  People want the same kind if usability on their smartphones and tablets that they have on their laptops and PCs but they want it now, not in 2 or 3 years.  People don't their computing to be tied down by location any more than they want their telephony to require physical proximity.  There may be congestion issues with mobile computing at the moment, but people are still abandoning fixed internet connections in favour of mobile broadband and phone and tablet computing in droves. All many people need to make the switch total is some killer apps, and that will happen sooner rather than later.



Title: Re: why aren't we, the community, regularly paying the lead developers of bitcoin?
Post by: Fluttershy on September 06, 2012, 07:05:00 AM
Bitcoin is a labor of love, they do it because they want to take power away from the big banks and big government.


Title: Re: why aren't we, the community, regularly paying the lead developers of bitcoin?
Post by: HorseRider on September 06, 2012, 08:03:15 AM
I think the best way to pay the developers is to invest some time and money to make sure that anyone who has contributed will be remembered. The psychological incentive is more meaningful than money.


Title: Re: why aren't we, the community, regularly paying the lead developers of bitcoin?
Post by: HostFat on September 06, 2012, 08:09:37 AM
I think the best way to pay the developers is to invest some time and money to make sure that anyone who has contributed will be remembered. The psychological incentive is more meaningful than money.
*


Title: Re: why aren't we, the community, regularly paying the lead developers of bitcoin?
Post by: interlagos on September 06, 2012, 09:57:14 AM

That said... stay tuned, and I'll say more when I can.


oh my god we just figured out the announcement!


A government is funding bitcoin development!

ITS CANADA!!!!

The US has a secret government run by the CIA  :D

Plus they have a venture capital firm for it.

Now that they've acquired a good portion of Bitcoin economy (Pirate was a CIA agent) they can announce support for it => profit! :)


Title: Re: why aren't we, the community, regularly paying the lead developers of bitcoin?
Post by: Dice on September 06, 2012, 11:59:30 AM
What would be cool is if mining pool's gives the option to miners to donate some funds to a shared developers bitcoin wallet.

Then at the end of each release, the funds inside that address will be automatically divided equally based on criteria possibly such as:

1) the number of commits
2) number of lines written
3) Im not sure if its possible to gauge the severity or importance of a fix.


Title: Re: why aren't we, the community, regularly paying the lead developers of bitcoin?
Post by: paulie_w on September 06, 2012, 12:48:19 PM
What would be cool is if mining pool's gives the option to miners to donate some funds to a shared developers bitcoin wallet.

Then at the end of each release, the funds inside that address will be automatically divided equally based on criteria possibly such as:

1) the number of commits
2) number of lines written
3) Im not sure if its possible to gauge the severity or importance of a fix.

those qualifiers are not good signs of quality or useful code.

but what about the idea of bounties for features?

actually i'm not a huge fan of that either, at least not by itself. i really think we should let the devs figure out how they want to break up the money. we just need to give it to them.


Title: Re: why aren't we, the community, regularly paying the lead developers of bitcoin?
Post by: imsaguy on September 06, 2012, 01:04:18 PM

That said... stay tuned, and I'll say more when I can.



Where have we heard that before?  :P


Title: Re: why aren't we, the community, regularly paying the lead developers of bitcoin?
Post by: bg002h on September 06, 2012, 01:22:53 PM
Hopefully the devs have a stake in Bitcoin from being early adopters...thus, they work to increase the value of their own coin. Also, it's not just devs that make Bitcoin valuable. Perhaps we should pay magicaltux, Charlie at bitinstant, coinabul, Casascius, Matthew, etc.


Title: Re: why aren't we, the community, regularly paying the lead developers of bitcoin?
Post by: epetroel on September 06, 2012, 01:28:07 PM

That said... stay tuned, and I'll say more when I can.


oh my god we just figured out the announcement!


My guess would be that the project is going to be picked up by some OSS foundation - Apache maybe?


Title: Re: why aren't we, the community, regularly paying the lead developers of bitcoin?
Post by: istar on September 06, 2012, 01:32:44 PM


The point I clearly didn't make is that it's no surprise that Starbucks accepts things like Square because those are just improved technologies propping up the status quo.

Bitcoin is helping to build an entirely new economic model from the ground up.

Square plans to disrupt the retail payments market.  Merchant acceptance is what will bring users onboard.  There's no expensive infrastructue so merchants can adopt it with little risk.  It's becoming a common strategy.

Bitcoin will only ever be a niche currency until it's user-friendly - no matter how sound it is.  It could be being used as a leap frog technology in developing nations right now if it wasn't so cumbersome.  More user-friendly systems requiring only a smartphone already exist - Bitcoin needs to lift its game if it wants to compete in the payments market and not just be a speculative commodity until something shinier comes along.

Bitcoin creditcards? Bitcoin wallets like Bitcoinspinner for Android, super easy to use webwallets like coinbase and mywallet at blockchain.info.
Sending Bitcoins, via twitter, email, facebook...


Title: Re: why aren't we, the community, regularly paying the lead developers of bitcoin?
Post by: paulie_w on September 06, 2012, 03:22:46 PM
I've said that I think the download-and-install-software-on-your-PC is a mostly-dead way of using software, and that the vast majority of people using Bitcoin in a year or three will be using it via a web application or on their smart phone. That's half of the reason why I don't think improving the UI is a high priority right now (the other half is because I think solving wallet security and backup issues is critical).

people have been saying that for years and years already. i hope it isn't true.
I think Gavin's essentially right about the future of software but has over-estimated the time-frame.  People want the same kind if usability on their smartphones and tablets that they have on their laptops and PCs but they want it now, not in 2 or 3 years.  People don't their computing to be tied down by location any more than they want their telephony to require physical proximity.  There may be congestion issues with mobile computing at the moment, but people are still abandoning fixed internet connections in favour of mobile broadband and phone and tablet computing in droves. All many people need to make the switch total is some killer apps, and that will happen sooner rather than later.

i don't know. if what we're talking about is download-and-run vs download-and-run-in-browser, apple, google AND microsoft have shifted the game back to the latter, and it's probably going to stay that way for a good while.

(although frankly given the increasing restrictions you can almost count the app stores as 'browsers')


Title: Re: why aren't we, the community, regularly paying the lead developers of bitcoin?
Post by: paulie_w on September 06, 2012, 03:25:51 PM


The point I clearly didn't make is that it's no surprise that Starbucks accepts things like Square because those are just improved technologies propping up the status quo.

Bitcoin is helping to build an entirely new economic model from the ground up.

Square plans to disrupt the retail payments market.  Merchant acceptance is what will bring users onboard.  There's no expensive infrastructue so merchants can adopt it with little risk.  It's becoming a common strategy.

Bitcoin will only ever be a niche currency until it's user-friendly - no matter how sound it is.  It could be being used as a leap frog technology in developing nations right now if it wasn't so cumbersome.  More user-friendly systems requiring only a smartphone already exist - Bitcoin needs to lift its game if it wants to compete in the payments market and not just be a speculative commodity until something shinier comes along.

Bitcoin creditcards? Bitcoin wallets like Bitcoinspinner for Android, super easy to use webwallets like coinbase and mywallet at blockchain.info.
Sending Bitcoins, via twitter, email, facebook...

i shouldn't speak for him/her so much, i don't think that is what was meant exactly.

we're just talking about the very first experience here. you download, you run, and what happens? how many people assume that it is broken or not working because of a simple thing like the app not explaining that the blockchain has to download first?


Title: Re: why aren't we, the community, regularly paying the lead developers of bitcoin?
Post by: Severian on September 06, 2012, 03:58:13 PM
Perhaps we should pay magicaltux, Charlie at bitinstant, coinabul, Casascius, Matthew, etc.

You pay them by using their services or buying their products. For instance, everyone has bought some physical bitcoins from Casascius, yes?


Title: Re: why aren't we, the community, regularly paying the lead developers of bitcoin?
Post by: paulie_w on September 06, 2012, 04:16:30 PM
yes i think the distinction needs to be made between already operating-for-profit companies and core bitcoin TEAM or related projects.


Title: Re: why aren't we, the community, regularly paying the lead developers of bitcoin?
Post by: Fluttershy on September 06, 2012, 04:23:22 PM
If the developers wanted to and were able to get Mt Gox and some of the larger mining pools on board, they could roll back the block chain to zero, claiming that since bitcoin was out of beta, they'd need to restart the whole thing. You should be polite to the devs so they don't do this.


Title: Re: why aren't we, the community, regularly paying the lead developers of bitcoin?
Post by: Mike Hearn on September 06, 2012, 04:37:10 PM
I agree with Steve that the right way to do this is to post assurance contracts (they don't have to be dominant) for concrete, well planned out and achievable goals.

"Assurance contract" is just a fancy term for what Kickstarter does. People make pledges. The money doesn't leave your wallet unless enough money is pledged collectively. With Bitcoin it can be done middleman-free.

The reasons this hasn't happened yet are:

  • Most core developers are either already able to devote a lot of time to Bitcoin, or have stable jobs that they want to keep for now.
  • The infrastructure for doing Bitcoin assurance contracts doesn't exist.

I suspect in future somebody will set up a company that implements highly desired features using ACs as a funding mechanism.


Title: Re: why aren't we, the community, regularly paying the lead developers of bitcoin?
Post by: Elwar on September 06, 2012, 06:04:27 PM
Who is "we" and what are the requirements to be part of "the community"?


Title: Re: why aren't we, the community, regularly paying the lead developers of bitcoin?
Post by: MatthewLM on September 06, 2012, 06:53:37 PM
I'm putting a lot of time into cbitcoin at the moment. The motivation is not only to support bitcoin but because it leads onto some business ideas I have. Business sponsorship of bitcoin development would be one way forward.


Title: Re: why aren't we, the community, regularly paying the lead developers of bitcoin?
Post by: paulie_w on September 06, 2012, 07:10:24 PM
why do we need business sponsorship of bitcoin when we are literally making money?


Title: Re: why aren't we, the community, regularly paying the lead developers of bitcoin?
Post by: paulie_w on September 06, 2012, 07:12:04 PM
another idea: paying translators.

https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=106233


Title: Re: why aren't we, the community, regularly paying the lead developers of bitcoin?
Post by: molecular on September 06, 2012, 07:29:56 PM
I'd rather see people on the dev team that do that awesome work because they believe in bitcoin and are crypto-geeks at heart rather than people who code for money.



Title: Re: why aren't we, the community, regularly paying the lead developers of bitcoin?
Post by: MatthewLM on September 06, 2012, 07:32:18 PM
why do we need business sponsorship of bitcoin when we are literally making money?

What do you mean? Who's making money for what?


Title: Re: why aren't we, the community, regularly paying the lead developers of bitcoin?
Post by: molecular on September 06, 2012, 09:07:16 PM
why do we need business sponsorship of bitcoin when we are literally making money?

What do you mean? Who's making money for what?

he means we are mining it


Title: Re: why aren't we, the community, regularly paying the lead developers of bitcoin?
Post by: paulie_w on September 06, 2012, 09:56:36 PM
yep


Title: Re: why aren't we, the community, regularly paying the lead developers of bitcoin?
Post by: MatthewLM on September 06, 2012, 10:14:51 PM
Since when were miners sponsoring bitcoin development?


Title: Re: why aren't we, the community, regularly paying the lead developers of bitcoin?
Post by: paulie_w on September 07, 2012, 04:42:19 AM
i'm not saying miners have to support developers, i'm saying we are literally manufacturing money with this platform, so we don't really have a problem figuring out where to get it, and we don't have to go to "businesses".


Title: Re: why aren't we, the community, regularly paying the lead developers of bitcoin?
Post by: dissipate on September 07, 2012, 08:28:10 AM
i'm not saying miners have to support developers, i'm saying we are literally manufacturing money with this platform, so we don't really have a problem figuring out where to get it, and we don't have to go to "businesses".

So you are saying that miners should subsidize the developers?  ::)


Title: Re: why aren't we, the community, regularly paying the lead developers of bitcoin?
Post by: paulie_w on September 07, 2012, 02:20:57 PM
no i am saying that we should setup a fund and everyone that can contribute, should.

i don't give a fuck about the difference between miners and regular users.


Title: Re: why aren't we, the community, regularly paying the lead developers of bitcoin?
Post by: Bitcoin Oz on September 07, 2012, 02:56:08 PM
Coming from more than a decade of open source this thread seems weird, there's been a surprisingly big gap between open and closed source mindsets for as long as I can remember though.

The bit of the title that looks most alien to me is "paying". That's alien to the whole principle of open source, put "contributing to" in there and I'd say thanks for bringing it up. Not sure if the GLBSE charity fund goes towards bitcoin development, hope so as there are some 1mhz mining bonds I've been meaning to contribute to it for a while, they don't make much but every bit counts.
https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=92684.0



Currently the dividends go to the faucet , the testing project, bitcoin100 and the bounty for blockchain compression. Theres a lot of worthy bitcoin projects and not enough dividends to go round unfortunately. Im hoping the testing project comes soon to save me having to choose winners and losers in the process.

*pokes Gavin




Title: Re: why aren't we, the community, regularly paying the lead developers of bitcoin?
Post by: crazy_rabbit on September 07, 2012, 04:08:03 PM
I'd rather see people on the dev team that do that awesome work because they believe in bitcoin and are crypto-geeks at heart rather than people who code for money.

I feel the same way about the Police. Thats why I want to fire them all and only rely upon super-heros who do it solely for Truth, Justice and the American way. You don't see Superman bitching about paying his rent do you? Nope, he's got a horrible day job where he's treated like crap by his bosses and mocked on a daily basis to make ends meet, but thats the point isn't it? By making it EXTRA difficult and exhausting to be a hero for the community we make sure we don't get stuck with any of those lousy pragmatic types that give in to the realities of putting food on the table. Nope, thats what makes them SUPER HEROS.

That, and the fact they don't exist.

 ;)