Gentoo Officially Not-For-Profit 227
iswm writes "The paperwork for the Gentoo Not-For-Profit entity was approved by the State of New Mexico today. This means that as of today, the Gentoo Foundation is an official Not-For-Profit Corporation in the United States. The process of becoming a Federally-recognized not-for-profit entity, which will take about six months for approval, can now begin."
no more taxes (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:no more taxes (Score:4, Informative)
In New Mexico.
The blurb was badly written. They are not tax exempt in the United States and the standards for state tax exempt status are usually somewhat different and easier (fill out the forms) than the federal standards.
About six months from now Gentoo may or may not be nonprofit in the United States.
KFG
rtfb (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:rtfb (Score:2)
Just my
Re:no more taxes (Score:2)
Re:no more taxes (Score:2)
Then people are more likely to donate, and they get other benefits, too.
Re:no more taxes (Score:2)
Re:no more taxes (Score:4, Informative)
In order for a not-for-profit to receive tax exemption it has to qualify under the IRS codes section 501(c). The most common being 501(c)(3) for charitable organizations.
Before the compiling jokes arrive. (Score:4, Informative)
donations (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:donations (Score:3, Informative)
Re:donations (Score:5, Informative)
Re:donations (Score:5, Funny)
Of course...that should have said "and donations to these entities are not tax deductible."
Re:donations (Score:2)
see you in three days then?
Re:donations (Score:5, Informative)
In order to be able to receive tax deductable contributions you have to apply to the IRS to be a 501(c)3 tax-exempt organization. The blurb on Gentoo.org doesn't say what section they're applying under, but it would be pretty surprising if the IRS granted them charitable status. It's usually reserved for charities, artistic or literary foundations, churches, etc.
I'll second that (Score:2, Informative)
BTW, churches usually don't try to get 501(c)3 status, although the charitable organzations they run often do. See this FAQ [nonprofits.org] for details.
Celebrate (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Celebrate (Score:2)
Linux is not for profits? (Score:5, Funny)
Will the government remove their not for prophet status if they discover how deep the OSS religion goes?
Re:Linux is not for profits? (Score:2, Funny)
Maybe, but then they will get a tax exempt status for being a religion, and maybe even qualify for funding under the "faith based initiative".
Re:Linux is not for profits? (Score:3, Funny)
Gentoo is a just a little spawnlet.
Okay okay, I'm done. Don't throw the tomatoes too hard.
Um, so they're not for profit yet? (Score:2)
Re:Um, so they're not for profit yet? (Score:2)
If something comes up in the mean time then that story will most likely be
Re:Um, so they're not for profit yet? (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Um, so they're not for profit yet? (Score:2)
Non profit Corpoartion - what this actually means (Score:5, Informative)
Non Profit Corporations [wikipedia.org]
Non Profit Organizations [wikipedia.org]
Okay, a question... (Score:2, Interesting)
I've been looking for a new distro lately. Where does Gentoo fall in this list?
Re:Okay, a question... (Score:2, Insightful)
It offers a lot in the way of flexibility unlike the binary only distributions, but it's not for the impatient or new linux users.
Being that Gentoo is sourced based and community driven you will find pieces of it that come from every other major distribution which is pretty darn cool when you think about it. One of the first things that attracted me was the ability to make changes to it and get a system built that matched my needs and bein
Re:Okay, a question... (Score:5, Informative)
Gentoo is as easy to maintain as Debian, but it is generally more geared towards people that want the latest stuff on their desktops (whereas Deb is not very desktop-friendly). In comparison to the desktop distro crop (Redhat, Suse, Mandrake, etc.), Gentoo stands out favorably (IMHO) in that it is much more accessible and maintainable from the command line. This may scare noobs, but tweaking the ol' config file is a lot more deterministic and promising than dealing with dialogs like 'there was a problem with your network device' and with custom vendor kernel weirdness.
So, to sum it up: Gentoo combines the best of both worlds: it is a very hard-core, clean, unixy distro with a very refreshing attitude towards desktop usage. IMHO, the only thing that beats Gentoo on your desktop will be OS X!
Debian is not only Debian-stable (Score:2)
I'm a Debian/Slack/freeBSD user who will give Gentoo a shot sometime soon. One think I'd love to do is establishing some kind of standarized benchmarks. Uptime is not everything for the desktop.
Re:Okay, a question... (Score:2)
In my data center we are actually using both. I also use Gentoo at home. Though I think I'm one more KDE problem away from the main box being reformatted to XP by my wife.
I many care about having the latest version of KDE. She just has this unnatural obsession with DVD's playing back every time she sits the baby in front of the tube, complete with sound and not looking like ass.
For the record I am usually able to accomplish this. Ther
I have both (Score:3, Informative)
It's frustrating, because I have to choose one or the other; I like them both so much.
The thing I like about Gentoo is that it is much easier (some folks actually recommend) to keep current "piecemeal", which would be better for dialup. You can update one package at a time, or, more precisely, one package and its dependencies at a time.
Debian is sort of easiest (in my experience) to upgrade all at once,
Re:Gentoo better Desktop distro than Debian? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Gentoo better Desktop distro than Debian? (Score:4, Interesting)
1. The community: Asking questions on #debian about your KDE install is likely to get you responses like 'bah! I don't use desktops. I use X occasionally, but I don't really use KDE. Read the manual!'. Since Linux is a DIY OS, this may be troublesome.
2. The apps: by the time I switched to Gentoo, I could emerge KDE 3.1, whilst deb stable was still at the ancient KDE 2. At that time, Unstable was severely broken because of the whole gcc versioning issue. In general, new desktop apps appear in Gentoo in a matter of days, even hours after a release, whereas Debian unstable is a lot slower and more conservative at adapting.
3. The features: Gentoo is a bit more friendly towards newer features as well. As an example, getting ALSA to work in Debian about 1.5 years ago was a big pain. Gentoo supported it ever since I switched. In fact, it was my main reason for switching. Gentoo had a clear ALSA installation Howto present and all core packages were in Portage.
The point I like to stress here is that these differences are a direct result of the Debian attitude towards desktop usage. Don't take my word for it, go out on the irc channels and talk to these people. They are not keen on new desktop features and getting the latest media player or desktop environment to work is just not on their agenda. That's cool, unless it is on your agenda. Then you might want to give Gentoo a spin.
Re:Gentoo better Desktop distro than Debian? (Score:2)
Install time and effort is immaterial, since you only do it once (like debian). With the provided instructions, it's really not any harder than debians install. (though that's not saying much).
I like both d
Re:Okay, a question... (Score:3, Insightful)
supports chroot, including another partition), gives me a clean base system
without anything I didn't ask for, makes installing and updating software a
breeze, and has a community that is active and friendly.
Basically, I like it for all the reasons I like BSD.
Re:Okay, a question... (Score:3, Informative)
They basically make it very easy to beta-test new software, which results in improvements for everyone.
In fact, I'd say it is almost because of Gentoo that so many compiler warnings have been fixed in source code packages all over the world.
And it also helps verify that software is truly cross-platform.
Re:Why does it have to target a niche? (Score:2)
The niche finds the distribution, rather then the other way around. Linux is really awesome like that, you can use it for whatever you want to use it for.
You can put Mandrake on all your servers and Redhat on all your workstations if you want to. You can put Gentoo on the firewalls and SuSE on the mail serv
a good answer from bash (Score:2)
<mfbian_> how will you compare slackware and freebsd
<Cheethoe> apples and oranges
<mfbian_> fair enough
<`justin`> slackware = for people that have been molested freebsd = people that want to molest their mothers
<`justin`> openbsd = for people that probably wont ever get molested
<`justin`> netbsd = molesting of all minorities, and cock asians
<mfbian_> how about gentoo
<`justin`> I dont know ask khai
--> big
Re:mmm, unhealthy... (Score:2)
yay for gentoo (Score:3, Informative)
How about FOR profit? (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:How about FOR profit? (Score:3, Informative)
NFP status also makes Gentoo eligable for numerous government research and education grants. That's money with not strings attached, save to do the work as stated. No corporate tie-ins, no funding pulled because you are competing with their product. Of course there are political issues that are difficult to negotiat
Re:How about FOR profit? (Score:2)
Re:How about FOR profit? (Score:5, Informative)
Basically, being a NFP will relieve much of the money-making pressure on Gentoo, so they can fulfill their Social Contract [gentoo.org], without having to compromise it so they can mmet some aribitrary profit targets imposed by shareholders and so.
NFP also is a testimony to their commitment on giving back to the community instead of giving to some high-profile exec or a limited bunch of anonymous shareholders.
In principle, it's a good thing, but let's see how they can get a cash flow going (not necessarily profit, but they should have at least the means to keep paying their bills on time).
Re:How about FOR profit? (Score:2)
There's no law saying it has to be a corporation. If you don't have shareholders, you don't have to compromise. In fact, incorporation itself is compromise!
Re: (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:How about FOR profit? (Score:4, Insightful)
Capitalists are not about making money, they are about destroying it. A capitalist wants to concentrate all of the wealth in one person.
I'm not necessarily a capitalist but I do have those impulses and I can tell you that given free reign, that is where they would lead.
Re:How about FOR profit? (Score:2)
But this begs the one question that not one capitalist will dare to consider: Then what?
Once all the wealth is concentrated in one person (not that this would ever be possible), what happens next? Does the world stop with a victory celebration for the winner? Does Jesus/Allah/Vishnu/Buddha drop by for a congratulatory hug and a champagne shower? Do the people without the wealth cease to exist?
Seriously. What happens next? What is t
Re:How about FOR profit? (Score:2)
As a simple example:
there are many nations who have abundant natural resources, yet are financially poor.
Natural resources have a value; ie they have a price at which people are willing to pay, barter, or distribute. Now, if one was to take that resource and add human labor to create a product (fashioning a tool out of iron ore), that product has a value which is greater than the resource itself. (A hammer is
Re:How about FOR profit? (Score:2)
I am a capitalist, and happen to believe socialism won't work, but it's nice to see someone who can disagree politely.
I also happen to be a compassionate person who sees noble value in doing things which are for the good of society, regardless of personal profit. I just happen to think that the decision to do that should be voluntary, not mandated.
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Um... huh? (Score:2)
Re:How about FOR profit? (Score:2)
Re:How about FOR profit? (Score:2)
To a true capitalist, there is never enough money, and I'm fine with that.
*ENOUGH* money (Score:5, Insightful)
The real problem is a hijacking of the concept of 'money'. 'Money' was originally meant to be a means of extended barter. You need a chicken, I need work done on my house, but I have spare corn instead of a chicken. We could find a third party that needs corn, and has a chicken. Or we could come up with 'money' that lets us extend our barter system into a marketplace, and allows all goods to become more liquid.
Unfortunately, for some people money has turned into a measure of self-esteem. They're not even collecting castles, or jet planes, or home theaters, or any sort of goods, any more. They measure their success by incrementing digits.
Also unfortunately, as much as we'd like to think of the economy as an expanding pie that has room for everyone to get as much as they want without depriving others, it just isn't. Though there is some expansion, the finite size of the pie is painfully apparent to many. In order for the more successful to tick their digits upward, they end up taking away from others. In other terms, this can be called 'downsizing', 'offshoring', 'making benefits competitive', and the like.
Why this use of money is bad is that it's so easy to tick digits upward. Had these people been accumulating toys and property, it would be more obviously outrageous.
The nifty thing about a gift economy is that it lets you measure your self-esteem through contribution. But it does need to piggyback on top of a money economy, because goods in the real world aren't free, and we all need to eat and get out of the rain.
Finding the balance between gift and money economies, and getting Joe 6pak to buy into that balance, is the task for TruenGenius.
Re:How about FOR profit? (Score:2)
You don't have to be a non-profit corporation in order to be a part of the community. Linux (you know, that kernel thing) is very much a part of the community, yet it is unincorporated. It is not a businesses. It's just this one guy living in Santa Clara that's doing it!
Granted, since Gentoo doesn't have "just one guy" behind it, it does need an organizational structure. But that structure doesn't hav
Re:How about FOR profit? (Score:5, Insightful)
Our software is GPL'd. You're welcome to pursue this. We chose a different path.
Non-profits are permitted to make money (Score:4, Informative)
I used to run a non-profit environmental journal. We made money on occasion and when we had excess we had this nifty idea called: giving it to the poor. Problem is: that makes you a hell-bound commie in Merika.
OK (Score:2)
Altruism (Score:2)
Re:Altruism (Score:2)
Which is not very altruistic. I don't mean to sound like Kant here, but public relations promotion or tax breaks are both fickle reasons. Doing it because it helps should be primary. The other stuff is merely gravy.
Profit in support not selling bits ... (Score:3, Interesting)
I'm person
Re:Profit in support not selling bits ... (Score:2)
That's a rather sweeping statement. Time will tell. So far Red Hat's doing pretty well at it. Moreover, there's more to the Linux distro business than just selling shrinkwrap vs. support. IBM, Novell and Sun, for example, are using their distros as loss-leaders (or break-even leaders, whatever) to drive sales of stuff like hardware, server software, and consulting.
What I'd like to see is Gentoo
Re:Profit in support not selling bits ... (Score:2)
Yes they are. They were doing better though when they had RH Linux (for free) and you could buy yearly subscriptions for $80. I personally bought one for myself and two for work. I know I could've bought one and juggled it around but RH is pretty cool and I didn't feel right about being that cheap with them.
Moreover, there's more to the Linux distro business than just selling shrinkwrap vs. support.
I'm cur
This just seen (Score:2)
Re:How about FOR profit? (Score:2)
Right wingers like to build bigger fences so they can try to forget that the neighbours exist, and do take pride in 'how big there fence is'
The compiler jokes are becoming boring (Score:5, Insightful)
Making these jokes is getting to be worse than the zealots who made the ill-advised compiler flag comments in the first place.
Gentoo is an impressive distribution, although admittedly it has its faults (find me a distribution that doesn't). I'm glad I got to experiment with it before it became fashionable to make derogatory jokes about it. Tthere's a fair chance all the +5 funny/insightful diminishing comments might have deterred me.
Re:The compiler jokes are becoming boring (Score:2)
What I enjoy most is what most newbies bitch about. The minimalist installer. I just used the LiveCD to backup and restore a clients Win2K laptop last night. On that disk is a respectable arsenol to tools in the hands of a skilled wizard.
Portage, for it's warts, does the job. And where it doesn't it's simple enough to hack. I run my own offshoot for our in-house servers with a few custom ebuilds.
Comment removed (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:The compiler jokes are becoming boring (Score:3, Insightful)
All in all despite the odd hiccup, g
Re:The compiler jokes are becoming boring (Score:2)
Re:The compiler jokes are becoming boring (Score:2)
Less negativity please! (Score:3, Interesting)
I might even put my money where my mouth is onces it's tax deductable.
Any plans to do the same in Europe?
True meaning of 'Not for Profit' (Score:4, Informative)
I think there are several people that do not understand what a Not for Profit company really means. Not for Profit doesn't mean they do not make money it only means that they cannot have 'extra cash' on hand at the end of their fiscal year. They can still have money in savings because you can budget money into saving. Also at times, working for a NFP company can be a benifit since they can't have 'extra cash' then they sometimes pay really well.
Take Blue Cross Blue Shield (an American insurance company), they are actually a NFP organization. Most people don't realize this but it is true.
Re:True meaning of 'Not for Profit' (Score:2)
Re:True meaning of 'Not for Profit' (Score:2)
Your resume must be huge.
Re:True meaning of 'Not for Profit' (Score:2)
I've worked at a lot of non-profit startups (Score:2, Interesting)
Gentoo is a lot more sophisticated than most of my former employers, though.
They didn't get non-profitable status legally established until the bankruptcy hearings.
Aren't they non-profit already?? (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Aren't they non-profit already?? (Score:2)
When it was finished compiling he drew out a patch, dissolved it in guiness and said "This is the blood of the project. It was shed for the corrections of all bugs. Take and drink."
Gentoo icon? (Score:3, Insightful)
(insert joke that the Gentoo icon is still compiling here...)
CB
isn't VISA not for profit too? (Score:3, Funny)
This needs to change (Score:4, Informative)
Donate to Gentoo, I did, and even if I gave them $100 a year, it'd STILL be a much better deal than if I was able to get Windows for free, forever.
Re:This needs to change (Score:2)
Re:This needs to change (Score:2)
Yes. You're correct, but I wonder if we aren't harming ourselves by acting like this:
When you take money and apply it exclusively to commercialization, without using any for research, then you usually get poor innovation and stagnation.
When y
Whew! (Score:2)
zach
Nonprofit??? (Score:2)
Re:Nonprofit??? (Score:2)
Re:The real question is.... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:The real question is.... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:The real question is.... (Score:2, Informative)
Re:It's wrong!! (Score:4, Funny)
1) fetch packages
2) compile
3) ???
4) !PROFIT
Re:oh? (Score:2)
Some troll^Wone ought to tell them that "not for profit" status is a terrible way to make money, then.
Re:oh? (Score:2)
I see it as a tax-code definition (otherwise they'd presumably just become a charitable foundation?), but I also don't see gentoo.org sitting down and deciding "let's become a not-for-profit so our CEO can get rich quick." I could be completely wrong, but my understanding of Gentoo is that they took this course for stability rather than greed.
Re:Great! (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Of course they're not for profit... (Score:2)
I don't think you understand how the national debt works: it is like a credit card. We just keep charging to it, and eventually, when it gets too high, our daddy will come in and pay it off for us. Hopefully he will buy us a new car then too.
Re:Of course they're not for profit... (Score:2)
Re:Interesting (Score:3, Funny)
Then of course there's all the other crackpots that live here, making Gentoo fit in real nice. Roswell's alien crowd, and the various hippy religious cults.
You can mod me down, but it's true.
Re:Interesting (Score:2)
What's your reason for being here / staying here? I grew up here and managed to get a good job at WSMR, so I have no reason to go anywhere.