Bountysource was a crowdsourcing website for open source bounties and since 2012 also for crowdfunding. Users (called "backers") could pledge money for tasks using micropayment services that open-source software developers can pick up and solve to earn the money. It also allowed large-scale fundraising for big improvements on the project. It integrated with GitHub using its bug tracker to check if the problem is resolved and connect the resolution with GitHub's pull request system to identify the patch. When the users agree that they are satisfied and the project maintainer merged the proposed changes to the source-code, Bountysource would transfer the money acting as a trustee during the whole process. [1] [2]

Quick Facts Type of site, Available in ...
Bountysource
Type of site
Crowdfunding, bounties
Available inEnglish
Headquarters
San Francisco, California
,
United States
URLwww.bountysource.com
CommercialYes
Launched2003, relaunch in 2012
Close

History

Bountysource was started in the 2000s and by May 8, 2006, had integrated a new custom-built Subversion browser into the system.[3] On May 11, 2006, Bountysource released their Subversion browser, titled bsSvnBrowser, under the GNU General Public License.[4] The initial idea was to open-source more portions of Bountysource as time went on and the code matured to be a true open-source alternative to the proprietary SourceForge.net. The website was originally written in PHP, but as of March 18, 2006, it switched to Ruby on Rails.[5] Development on Bountysource was stopped in March 2008.[6]

It relaunched as a service using the GitHub-API in 2012 to focus on being a trustee for software development bounties that are collected through PayPal, Bitcoin, and other methods.[7][8]

In 2017, the company was bought by a cryptocurrency company called CanYa.

In 2020 it was bought by a company named The Blockchain Group, which became the owner on July 1. [9][10]

As of June 2023, Bountysource appears to have stopped paying bounties to developers with verified claims. The Blockchain Group also appears to have stopped responding to Bountysource users.[11][12]

In November 2023, the Bountysource parent company announced it had filed for bankruptcy.[13]

As of May 2024, Bountysource website says "The site is temporarily down".[14]

See also

References

Wikiwand in your browser!

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.

Every time you click a link to Wikipedia, Wiktionary or Wikiquote in your browser's search results, it will show the modern Wikiwand interface.

Wikiwand extension is a five stars, simple, with minimum permission required to keep your browsing private, safe and transparent.