Open source projects collects funds – but how do they spend them?
The Collective Funds Guidelines provides a framework for the use of funds.
An early v0.1 draft of the guidelines are available for early adoptors while we gather feedback.
Guidelines are not recommended for wider adoption until it reaches a stable v1.0.0 (staying in line with Semantic Versioning).
The current version of the guidelines are found in GUIDELINES.md
.
Historic versions are tagged in git and can be found in releases on GitHub.
- Mocha, see FUNDING.md
- (Your project? Open a PR!)
- Neostandard
- (Your project? Open a PR!)
You adopt the guidelines by noting the use in your FUNDING.md
file or README.md
.
See details in the How to Adopt Guidelines section of the guidelines.
If you use the Collective Funds Guidelines for your project, you can improve discoverability of it by using one of these badges in your README.md
:
[![Collective Funds Guidelines v0.1](https://img.shields.io/badge/collective_funds_guidelines-v0.1-D8E8D4?style=flat&labelColor=3A6457)](https://github.com/collective-funds/guidelines)
[![Collective Funds Guidelines v0.1](https://img.shields.io/badge/collective_funds_guidelines-v0.1-brightgreen?style=flat)](https://github.com/collective-funds/guidelines)
These guidelines are strongly inspired by the excellent prior art of ESLint and WebdriverIO.
They were initally drafted for the mocha and neostandard projects, aiming to provide them and other projects a common baseline that's easy to adopt and provides clarity on usage of funds – for maintainers as well as community.
First draft was written by @voxpelli with review and feedback from fellow co-maintainers and community.
To fascilitate feedback the Collective Funds group was set up, to help the community evolve the guidelines further.
The content of this repository (apart from names and logos) is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International Public License.