There just aren’t that many rivalrous goods in OSS—website hosting etc. tends to be covered by large tech companies as a goodwill/marketing/recruiting/supply-chain expense, c.f. the Python Sofware Foundation. Major conferences usually have some kind of scholarship program for students and either routinely pay speakers or cover costs for those who couldn’t attend otherwise; community-organized conferences like PyCon tend to be more generous with those. Honor-system “individual ticket” vs “corporate ticket” prices are pretty common, often with a cheaper student price too.
A key mechanism I think is that lots of people are aware that they have lucrative jobs and/or successful companies because of open source, that being basically the only way to make money off OSS, and therefore are willing to give back either directly or for the brand benefits.
There just aren’t that many rivalrous goods in OSS—website hosting etc. tends to be covered by large tech companies as a goodwill/marketing/recruiting/supply-chain expense, c.f. the Python Sofware Foundation. Major conferences usually have some kind of scholarship program for students and either routinely pay speakers or cover costs for those who couldn’t attend otherwise; community-organized conferences like PyCon tend to be more generous with those. Honor-system “individual ticket” vs “corporate ticket” prices are pretty common, often with a cheaper student price too.
A key mechanism I think is that lots of people are aware that they have lucrative jobs and/or successful companies because of open source, that being basically the only way to make money off OSS, and therefore are willing to give back either directly or for the brand benefits.