active questions tagged non-profit - Stack Overflow most recent 30 from stackoverflow.com 2009-12-12T04:23:17Z http://stackoverflow.com/feeds/tag/non-profit http://www.creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/2.5/rdf http://stackoverflow.com/questions/180551/is-there-an-online-system-to-support-donations-to-individuals-in-need 2 Is there an online system to support donations to individuals in need? [closed] Robert Rossney 2008-10-07T21:38:13Z 2009-12-02T19:21:56Z <p>A good friend of mine had a stroke yesterday. It would be a terrible situation even if he weren't a freelancer with no health insurance: he's now looking at the near-certainty of bankruptcy and the strong probability of homelessness in addition to being disabled. Two years ago, another friend of mine, who'd been battling breast cancer, ran out of money about six months before she ran out of life.</p> <p>I'm seeing this sort of situation happen with greater and greater frequency. It's occurring to me that there are a lot of people in my age cohort (I'm 47) who are one crisis away from being seriously in need. (I'm one. If you're a middle-aged freelancer in the US, you probably are too.)</p> <p>Every time this has happened, the response in the online communities I'm in has been similar: people want to help but don't know how, and eventually, someone steps forward and agrees to collect donations, consolidate them, and funnel them to the person in need. I've seen this particular wheel be reinvented three times in the last two years.</p> <p>It seems clear to me that this is a problem space that a good web-based system could be a great help in. But I haven't been able to find one. What I've been able to find are systems that support non-profit organizations' fund-raising efforts. There are a lot of reasons these systems aren't very useful for the situations I've seen, which (to use the buzzwords) have been as much about social networking as it is about e-commerce.</p> <p>Before I decide to put all of my silly hobby projects aside and turn my attention to this problem, I'd like to be sure that I'm not reinventing the wheel myself.</p> <p>Does anyone know of a web site or web application that supports the task of collecting and disbursing donations to individuals in need?</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/660892/free-ecommerce-service-for-non-profit-organization 1 Free eCommerce Service for non-profit organization? leeand00 2009-03-19T02:45:40Z 2009-11-10T18:33:35Z <p>Are there any free eCommerce processing services (similar to Paypal or Google Checkout) just for non-profit organizations? I'm looking into setting up paid registrations for a <a href="http://www.acrod.org/camp.html" rel="nofollow">summer-camp</a> that is a non-profit organization.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/407784/what-are-the-best-open-source-software-non-profits-for-making-financial-contribut 0 What are the best open-source software non-profits for making financial contributions and/or facilitating useful work? Jason S 2009-01-02T19:22:20Z 2009-01-05T17:58:02Z <p>I'm not a great programmer myself (my main job is more electrical engineering) and have never really helped out with any open source projects, but I've benefited greatly from free and/or open-source software (MySQL, OpenOffice, Firefox, Apache, PHP, Java, etc.) and at some point would like to make some modest financial contributions to help keep this stuff going.</p> <p>I'm wondering, what are the best non-profits to make financial contributions?</p> <p>I'm aware of:</p> <ul> <li><a href="http://www.opensource.org/" rel="nofollow">Open Source Initiative</a> (founded 10 years ago by several prominent figures including programmer and "The Cathedral and the Bazaar" author Eric S. Raymond)</li> <li><a href="http://www.fsf.org/" rel="nofollow">Free Software Foundation</a></li> <li><a href="http://www.mozilla.org/foundation/" rel="nofollow">Mozilla Foundation</a></li> <li><a href="http://www.apache.org/" rel="nofollow">Apache Foundation</a></li> </ul> <p>Anyone have a particular favorite? </p> <p>Ideally I'd like to give money to a non-profit that would foster some of the smaller but promising open-source and/or free software projects. The big projects like Firefox and Apache are already well-established. There are a few small individual shareware programs I've already paid for directly. But it's those middle-ground projects that I would really like my contributions to support. (one that comes to mind is a good GUI for Subversion or Mercurial.) </p> <p>It's one thing for a single person to donate a little $$ to a small project. It's another for a foundation or something to give larger grants to projects that give a good bang for the buck. Conservation organizations like The Nature Conservancy, or the Trust for Public Lands, have really honed this approach, but I'm not really sure if there's an equivalent model in software-land.</p>