[Jeff King, Shawn Pearce and myself represent the Git project to the Conservancy, and here is a request for help from us.] We apologize that we're interrupting the usual content on this mailing list with a fundraising message, but the non-profit home of the Git project, Software Freedom Conservancy, is in urgent need of your immediate support: https://sfconservancy.org/supporter/ Git receives a myriad of important services (see https://sfconservancy.org/members/services/ ) from Conservancy. We have relied on Conservancy since 2009 to provide them, and we ask that you support them. While Git gladly contributes 10% of our project's gross revenue to Conservancy's general fund, (while Conservancy maintains and administers the other 90% in collaboration with us to advance the Git project), that 10% of contributions from all Conservancy's member projects doesn't add up to enough to even employ one full time person, let alone the already overworked staff of three that Conservancy has. Conservancy's fundraiser, found at https://sfconservancy.org/supporter/ , is centered around asking individuals who care about the work that Conservancy does to donate $120/year, or just $10/month, to support the organization. Conservancy seeks about 2,500 Supporters to continue its current work, and 750 Supporters to continue a "bare minimum" of services to its projects. Here are some of the things that Conservancy does for Git that are in the "bare minimum" category: * Handle our Google Summer of Code payments and travel, including handling all financial transactions with Google to receive and then disperse the money. * Coordinating travel reimbursements for Git contributors to attend conferences. * Buying and shipping hardware to Git volunteer contributors who need it. * Keeping the non-profit status for us so that we don't have to form our own org and file our own paperwork. Here are some of the services Git has received in the wider category: * Dealing with questions from the community about the DCO and legal issues surrounding contributions to the Git project. * Discussing the issue of copyright governance and contributions with large corporations who want their employees to contribute to Git but need legal assurances or have questions relating to Git's license or contribution policies. * Helping us write the Git trademark policy: https://git-scm.com/trademark , registering the trademark, and enforcing the trademark when we need it. This assures Git users can know that when they see something called "Git", it relates to the Git project in some way. * And, in fact, we do very occasionally find companies violating the GPL on Git, and Conservancy has helped us out with that. As you can see, Git really relies on the important work of Conservancy, and thus the Git project leadership encourages you to choose Conservancy as one of your charitable gifts this holiday season. (Conservancy is a 501(c)(3) charity incorporated in New York, and donations are typically deductible on U.S. taxes.) Please visit: https://sfconservancy.org/supporter/ -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe git" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html