LibreOffice 与 过度反应的艺术
LibreOffice and the Art of Overreacting

原始链接: https://blog.documentfoundation.org/blog/2026/03/25/libreoffice-and-the-art-of-overreacting/

LibreOffice 即将推出的启动中心捐赠横幅引发了争论,一些人担心这可能意味着转向付费功能,尽管官方保证这仅仅是一项资金请求。该横幅会定期出现在启动屏幕上,不会妨碍功能使用,并且比之前显示在已打开文档*之上*的捐赠请求更不具侵入性。 批评者不公平地将其与“免费增值”模式相比较,忽视了文档基金会的对自由和开源软件的法律承诺及其透明的财务状况。像维基百科和 Mozilla Thunderbird 这样的项目也有类似甚至更显眼的捐赠请求,但受到的批评却少得多。 LibreOffice 拥有超过 1 亿用户,严重依赖个人捐赠(企业捐赠不足 5%),并旨在提高人们对这种资助关系的认识。该横幅不是财务困境的迹象,而是主动迈向可持续发展的一步,以确保这款重要的免费软件替代品能够持续开发和支持。这场争议凸显了对 FOSS 资助的误解以及由于资源有限而导致贡献者流失的风险。

## LibreOffice 捐赠横幅引发争议 LibreOffice 开发者最近决定提高捐赠请求的可见性,这在 Hacker News 上引发了科技社区内的讨论。争论的核心在于,这种实现方式——出现在启动屏幕上的横幅——是否具有侵入性,以及开发者对批评的回应是否恰当。 许多评论者对激进的筹款策略表示沮丧,并引用了与维基百科和其他不断请求捐赠的组织的不良经历。人们对“捐赠疲劳”以及可能疏远用户表示担忧。一些人则为开发者辩护,认为请求支持对于项目的可持续性是必要的,用户应该感谢免费软件。 一个反复出现的主题是用户体验的重要性以及越界的可能性。一些用户指出,对反馈的轻蔑态度可能比横幅本身更具破坏性。讨论还涉及开源世界中更广泛的问题,包括资金挑战、用户期望以及社区参与与开发者自主性之间的平衡。最终,这一事件凸显了开源项目与其用户群之间的微妙关系。
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原文

A donation banner is not an attack to users

The announcement that LibreOffice 26.8 will feature a donation banner in the Start Centre has prompted a flood of responses, ranging from positive from many FOSS supporters, who understand the need for funding, to mild apprehension to extreme alarm from others.

Some articles have described the change as an “aggressive fundraising campaign” and suggested that it is part of a dangerous trend towards “freemium” models and paid features. However, it is worth taking a step back to analyse what is actually being introduced and the broader context that many of these comments have ignored.

The banner will appear in the Start Centre – the screen that greets users when they launch LibreOffice without opening a specific document – and will occupy roughly the bottom quarter of the screen. It will not block any functionality, nor will it restrict access to any features. According to the implementation plan, it will appear periodically, but not at every launch.

That is all that is changing. It is a request that is certainly not intrusive, given that the Start Centre is a screen that many users – at best – glance at for a few seconds before opening a file.

Media coverage has largely omitted the fact that LibreOffice has been displaying donation requests for years. Previous versions displayed a banner above the open document roughly every six months.

Moving the request to the Start Centre is not an escalation, but a change in location and frequency. In fact, displaying the request in the Start Centre rather than above an open document makes it less intrusive for users. Therefore, the outrage is directed at something that has been there for a long time and has been quietly accepted by users.

Nobody is making the comparison with Mozilla Thunderbird, which has asked its users for donations practically every time it starts up, with clearly visible banners and campaign messages, for most of its existence as an independent project. This has never generated such controversy, nor has anyone ever accused Thunderbird of becoming “aggressive”. No slippery slope has been identified, and the software remains free and open source.

The same logic applies to Wikipedia. The Wikimedia Foundation displays prominent, often full-screen donation banners to its hundreds of millions of readers every year during its fundraising campaigns, with banners that are considerably more insistent than anything LibreOffice is planning. The reaction from the public and the tech press has consistently been sympathetic, not hostile.

The asymmetry is instructive. LibreOffice introduces a monthly banner on a screen that most users view for just a few seconds, and this immediately becomes controversial. Thunderbird and Wikipedia have persistently displayed donation requests for years, and the community has regarded this as normal.
Thunderbird and Wikipedia asking for money is widely understood as a reasonable consequence of providing free, ad-free, universally accessible resources.

The same understanding should extend naturally to LibreOffice. All these projects offer something of extraordinary value at no cost to the user, sustained entirely by voluntary contributions. The only real difference is that Thunderbird and Wikipedia’s funding models have been running for longer, and as such they become culturally normalised.

This difference in reaction has less to do with the feature itself and more to do with the particular expectations that some in the FOSS community have of office software, sometimes bordering on a sense of entitlement.

Some comments have even suggested that the donation banner is the first step towards a “freemium” model, whereby certain advanced features are hidden behind a subscription. This point deserves to be addressed directly, as it has no basis in fact.

The Document Foundation is a German Stiftung (a non-profit foundation) that is legally established and governed by a charter which clearly defines its mission: the development and distribution of LibreOffice as free and open-source software.

Its finances are public, and its governance is transparent. The structural and legal constraints placed on TDF serve as a safeguard for users, rendering the claim “today a banner, tomorrow a paywall” a wild flight of fancy. To assert otherwise without evidence is a despicable attempt to undermine the work of thousands of volunteers over the last sixteen years, whose sole aim is to serve users.

The real issue is the sustainability of FOSS. LibreOffice is used by over 100 million people worldwide, including governments, schools, businesses, and individual users. Collectively, they save billions of euros or dollars a year in proprietary software licence costs and take a fundamental step towards digital sovereignty.

The Document Foundation operates thanks to a majority of individual donations and a very small number of corporate contributions, amounting to less than 5% of the total. Like most comparable-sized FOSS projects, it consistently achieves a lot with few resources.

The foundation has always been transparent about this reality. The donation banner in the Start Centre is not a sign of desperation, but a reasonable and proportionate attempt to make the funding relationship between the project and its users slightly more visible.

Unfortunately, the way this feature has been covered in the media suggests that the debate on the sustainability of free software infrastructure is poorly understood.

The alternative – a project that slowly loses contributors because it is unable to support them – is considerably worse, as it affects everyone who depends on free and open-source office software.

In conclusion, a non-intrusive banner that appears monthly on a transition screen and asks users who save hundreds of euros or dollars a year to consider making a voluntary contribution is not scandalous, but rather a respectful request for support for a project that has grown over sixteen years and wishes to continue doing so.

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