德国将开源工作认定为志愿活动请愿书
Petition for Recognition of Work on Open-Source as Volunteering in Germany

原始链接: https://www.openpetition.de/petition/online/recognition-of-work-on-open-source-as-volunteering-in-germany

请愿书敦促德国联邦议院将对开源软件(OSS)的贡献合法定义为为了公共利益的志愿服务,与救护车服务或青年工作等传统志愿工作相提并论。 OSS构成了德国数字基础设施的关键基础——影响着行政管理、经济和日常生活——并且是实现数字主权的关键,正如现任执政联盟协议中所承认的那样。然而,OSS开发人员的大量无偿工作缺乏正式认可和相关的福利。 请愿书认为,OSS通过提供免费、透明且可审计的软件,为关键系统提供益处,从而明显地造福社会。将这项工作定义为志愿服务将释放税收优惠,明确责任问题,并更容易为项目提供资金,从而促进可持续性并吸引熟练的贡献者。 德国面临落后于国际社会的风险,因为其他国家已经支持OSS开发。正式认可被认为是对德国数字未来的一项具有成本效益的投资,也是迈向重视维护其技术基础的人们的重要一步。

黑客新闻 新的 | 过去的 | 评论 | 提问 | 展示 | 工作 | 提交 登录 德国将开源工作认定为志愿者的请愿书 (openpetition.de) 26 分,由 numeri 1 小时前 | 隐藏 | 过去的 | 收藏 | 1 条评论 mschild 9 分钟前 [–] 我同意这个目标,但除非你使用官方联邦议院网站创建请愿书,否则它和在 Facebook 上点赞一样没用。 如果你在官方网站上发起请愿书并且它通过了,他们必须处理它,即使是拒绝。https://epetitionen.bundestag.de/epet/peteinreichen.html 回复 指南 | 常见问题 | 列表 | API | 安全 | 法律 | 申请 YC | 联系 搜索:
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原文

Petition richtet sich an: German Bundestag, Petition Committee

Open-Source-Software builds the foundations of digital infrastructure in big parts - in administration, economy, science and daily life. Even the current coalition agreement of the Federal Government mentions Open-Source-Software as a fundamental building block for the achievement of digital sovereignty.

However, the work done by thousands of volunteers for this goal is not recognised as volunteering, neither fiscally nor in terms of funding. This imbalance between societal importance and legal status has to be corrected.

Therefore, as an active contributor to Open-Source-Projects, I call for work on Open-Source to be recognised as volunteering for the common good – of equal rank as volunteer work for associations, youth work or ambulance service.

Begründung

1. Open-Source contributes evidently to the common good

  • It is creating free, transparent and auditable software that is available for everyone.
  • Critical systems like internet protocols, security libraries, health IT, AI frameworks, energy management, education technologies and communication tools are based significantly on volunteer contributions.
  • Without this work, Germany would be digitally more dependent, less secure and less inventive.

Orientation on the common good is a central criterion for volunteering – and Open-Source fulfils it to the highest degree.

2. This work predominantly happens unpaid – and is voluntary civilian commitment

  • The majority of all work on development, maintenance and documentation happens voluntarily in leisure time.
  • Contributors take responsibility for security, stability and advancement of central software components, without getting paid and often recognised.
  • The commitment is comparable to work in associations for the public good, but digitally.

The legal equalisation with traditional volunteering is therefore coherent.

3. Societal dependence without appreciation

  • State facilities, town councils, schools and enterprises profit directly from Open-Source libraries, frameworks and tools.
  • Security vulnerabilities like "Heartbleed" or "Log4Shell" have shown the importance of work by maintainers for the protection of the public.
  • Concurrently, resources and structures are lacking, as the work is not formally recognised as volunteering – and does therefore not receive taxable or organisational benefits.

This creates an imbalance of responsibilities that lies on few volunteers, while millions of users are profiting.

4. Recognition as volunteering would create legal clarity
Possible results of formal recognition:

  • Compensations could be paid tax-exempt (Ehrenamtspauschale/Übungsleiterpauschale).
  • Open-Source projects for the common good could more easily receive a classification as per §52 AO.
  • Contributors could get a better position in issues of liability (similar to §31a BGB for an Association's Board).
  • Projects could legally reimburse expenses and issue donation receipts.

This creates transparency, legal clarity and sustainability in digital volunteer work.

5. Digitalisation needs competent volunteers – and those deserve funding

  • Open-Source commitment requires high technical competence
  • Volunteer developers perform work, that companies would otherwise need to buy for high hourly rates.
  • The state invests billions in digitalisation, but ignores the people who maintain the technological foundation voluntarily.

Recognition as volunteer work would be a cost-efficient contribution to digital sovereignty in Germany.

6. Germany limps behind internationally
Other countries are already funding commitment to Open-Source through:

  • Taxable benefits
  • Institutional support
  • Recognition of software development for the public good

Germany is risking to fall behind in international competition, if volunteers in the digital realm are structurally disadvantaged further.

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