Mozilla will donate $1 million to open-source projects
The foundation says that it’s looking to hand out money to as many as 10 projects, in amounts in the range of $10,000 to $250,000. The grant winners will be announced at the Mozilla coincidental work week scheduled for mid-December in Orlando, which is, in effect, the organization’s holiday party.
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The idea, the foundation said, is to give back to the projects that make Mozilla possible – whether by providing code that Mozilla uses in its products, or creating the tools project members use to do their jobs, or even underpinning the group’s infrastructure, Mozilla relies on a huge range of different open-source projects to function.
By giving back, Mozilla wants to both recognize these projects’ past contributions and ensure that they’re healthy for the future, so that they can continue to provide support.
Mozilla Foundation chairwoman Mitchell Baker said in an official blog post that the time had come to step up Mozilla’s financial contributions to the free and open-source software community.
“We have had a grant program for many years,” she wrote. “Now it is time to formalize a systematic way to provide a new level of support to this community.”
The MOSS program does represent a substantial donation by the foundation, which has doled out a total of roughly $2.5 million since 2006 to various open-source technologies, educational causes and free culture organizations. Mozilla’s still finalizing the application process for the grants, but the basic idea is for the community to provide nominees.