
On 24 February 2010 12:08, Brian Wood <woodbrian77@gmail.com> wrote:
I think Boost should work on turning traffic on it's pages into advertising revenue.
Hmmmm... If I can get a nickel for each message I approve or reject as moderator of a Boost mailing list, .... PROFIT! :-) More seriously, no. Once you start collecting money, you become a business. You start needing things like accountants and lawyers. Who will pay for that? If you are paying people for work performed, you may have to fill out IRS paperwork (if you are US based). Who is going to do that? Are we now an entity that can easily be sued?
That money could be used to help those who want to be involved in the project. Giving a review manager $200 for 40+ hours of work only makes sense.
Then comes the "which jobs do we pay for?". If a reviewer spends 80 hours doing a detailed review, should we pay them too? What about all the people who tirelessly work on getting a release out the door every quarter? Why should they work "for free" if other people are getting paid? If we don't make enough money from web advertising, you can't just not pay the review managers. Who will make up the deficit? Etc., etc. I understand the sentiment behind paying an honorarium to encourage people to do work, but I just don't see how it is practical. -- Nevin Liber <mailto:nevin@eviloverlord.com> (847) 691-1404