Changeset - 60616f422694
[Not reviewed]
0 1 0
Daniel Takamori (pono) - 2 years ago 2022-01-05 18:06:33
pono@sfconservancy.org
mdash html typos
1 file changed with 2 insertions and 2 deletions:
0 comments (0 inline, 0 general)
www/conservancy/templates/supporter/index.html
Show inline comments
...
 
@@ -118,13 +118,13 @@
 

	
 
<h3 id="Highlights">Highlights from some of our projects</h3>
 
<div data-read-more="Read more about our projects&hellip;">
 

	
 
  <p>Software Freedom Conservancy helped our projects engage in critical work
 
  this year. Overall, we raised, administered and facilitated <strong>$1.7 million</strong>
 
  to improve software freedom &mdash: this year alone!  Those funds
 
  to improve software freedom &mdash; this year alone!  Those funds
 
  go <em>directly</em> to fund <acronym title="Free and Open Source Software">FOSS</acronym>
 
  contributors.  We do the arduous work to sustain these FOSS communities:</p>
 

	
 
<p>We helped <b>Outreachy</b> expand to its largest cohorts ever. Our last
 
round accepted 71 interns, and we announced this week that the current round
 
 will have 62! (That's 133 interns &mdash; an <strong>27% growth</strong> from the previous two
...
 
@@ -223,13 +223,13 @@ organizations of all sizes can make the same commitment.</p>
 
  and Your Right to Install Under Copyleft</a>. Bradley also explained
 
  how <cite><a href="/blog/2021/jun/30/who-should-own-foss-copyrights/">It
 
  Matters Who Owns Your Copylefted Copyrights</a></cite> &mdash; which
 
  garnered a lot of great community conversations. In another vein, Sage
 
  Sharp of Outreachy wrote a tremendous piece
 
  titled <cite><a href="/blog/2021/apr/20/how-to-apologize/">So you want to
 
  apologize&hellip; Now what?</a></cite> &mdash: which has helped explain the
 
  apologize&hellip; Now what?</a></cite> &mdash; which has helped explain the
 
  entire life cycle apologizing for your own behavior. We can all learn from
 
  this piece about how to act more humanely in our shared spaces of
 
  production.</p>
 

	
 
<p>This was another long year of online conferences. While the traveling was
 
 easier (by not doing it), we miss the face to face relationship building
0 comments (0 inline, 0 general)