GPG Programmer Werner Koch Is Running Out of Money
New submitter jasonridesabike writes "ProPublica reports that Werner Koch, the man behind GPG, is in financial straits: "The man who built the free email encryption software used by whistleblower Edward Snowden, as well as hundreds of thousands of journalists, dissidents and security-minded people around the world, is running out of money to keep his project alive. Werner Koch wrote the software, known as Gnu Privacy Guard, in 1997, and since then has been almost single-handedly keeping it alive with patches and updates from his home in Erkrath, Germany. Now 53, he is running out of money and patience with being underfunded."
(You can donate to the project here..)
Looking at the list of donors page, it has this curious summary:
I'm not sure how to read that as this year is 2015. But if this is all for one person, they don't seem to be hurting for funds now.
"The great thing about multitasking is that several things can go wrong at once." -me
It's funny that you should mention that. Werner Koch still uses a 1024D key for email. In fact, nearly everyone at g10code.com either has no key listed or uses 1024D. Most of the people involved in the development of GnuPG use ancient 1042D keys.
It's not just GnuPG, though. Phil Zimmermann only uses 1024D.
Perhaps there's something we're missing?
If you want a vision of the future, imagine a youtube comments section scrolling - forever.
I hate to say it - but most people who do OSS work for the masses don't get paid for it.
I do packaging for Xen used from hobby users through to Disney - yet I get about $400AUD per year in donations. I also have to go buy my own test hardware (I need UEFI kit atm!).
I understand exactly what Werner means and the challenges faced - but I too don't see a solution for this. OSS has been linked for too long as a 'free solution' - which means nobody puts a currency value on the software and services that are made available to the world. I think its the mental relationship of OSS being 'free' causes it. Nobody blinks an eye to pay $100 for a Windows license - yet go for a $10 donation to an OSS project and people lose their minds...
Sendmail is like emacs: A nice operating system, but missing an editor and a MTA.