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Daniel Takamori (pono) - 17 months ago 2022-11-22 18:33:22
pono@sfconservancy.org
update YearInReview for 2022 fundraiser
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<h3 id="YearInReview">Our Year in Review</h3>
 
<div data-read-more="Summary of our year&hellip;">
 

	
 
<p>This past year we've all grown more conscious of our interconnected world.
 
   These events escalate the importance of free software tools that empower
 
   us all. Closed source and proprietary tools have overtaken many
 
   communication channels &mdash; particularly when we work from home. Even
 
   conferences and lecture series dedicated to &ldquo;open source
 
   infrastructure&rdquo; have been unable to escape the grasp of these closed
 
   systems. As we monitored these diffcult events, we prioritized support for
 
   those in our community that understand the crucial need
 
   for <a href="/blog/2021/feb/08/just-say-no-to-zoom/">conferences run
 
   solely with free software</a>.  We have been pleased to support free
 
   communication tools to assist with these efforts. <b>Our commitment to
 
   using, developing, and supporting free software tools and communities has
 
    never been stronger.</b></p>
 

	
 

	
 
<p>Over the past year, we took on new work that would have
 
  been <em>impossible</em> without your support. Last month, we filed
 
  a <a href="/vizio">lawsuit against long time license violator Vizio</a>.
 
  Through that lawsuit and many non-litigation ongoing license enforcement
 
  actions, Software Freedom Conservancy leads the field: We stand up for
 
  license compliance and holding corporation accountable when others
 
  won't. Our focus in software licensing defends consumer rights.  This novel and
 
  critical approach to license compliance culminates  years of effort by our amazing policy and legal experts. We
 
  believe software freedom, when properly and actively upheld, enables everyone to hold
 
  technology providers accountable to the people most 
 
  impacted by their actions.</p>
 

	
 
<p id="dmca-exemptions">This year, we filed more DMCA exemption requests than any organization in
 
  the country &mdash;
 
  and <a href="/news/2021/oct/28/2021-DMCA-final-exemptions-win/">we won on
 
  every single one</a>.  We clarified the right to jailbreak of routers (an
 
  essential activity of our <a href="https://openwrt.org">OpenWrt
 
  project</a>), won a new right to safely investigate devices for license
 
  compliance, and helped solidify privacy-related research.  Karen (our
 
  executive director) also participated with a coalition that achieved yet
 
  another exemption for medical devices!  Our lawyer, Pam Chestek, <a href="https://www.copyright.gov/1201/2021/hearing-transcripts/210407-Section-1201-Public-Hearing-Class-15-7a-7b.pdf#page=13">testified</a> at the DMCA
 
  hearings on these exemptions, and confronted industry lobbyists directly as
 
  they sought to use their extreme
 
  wealth and legal power to harm consumers. We stridently fight their overreach &mdash; one bit at a time.</p>
 
<p>We are proud to tell you about the important work we've accomplished over
 
the past 12 months. Software Freedom Conservancy continues to set the bar for
 
promoting ethical technology and advocacy for software freedom. Whether it's
 
continuing the tireless and incredibly important work of <a
 
href="https://sfconservancy.org/copyleft-compliance/">copyleft compliance</a>,
 
growing and working with our many <a
 
href="https://sfconservancy.org/members/current/">member projects</a>, or
 
leading the way in promoting diversity and inclusion efforts with <a
 
href="https://www.Outreachy.org/">Outreachy</a> and <a
 
href="https://computinginresearch.org/">The Institute for Computing in
 
Research</a>. This year was no different in showing our dedication to software
 
freedom and critiques of those who oppose it.</p>
 

	
 
<p>We are entering the second year of our <a href="https://sfconservancy.org/copyleft-compliance/vizio.html">lawsuit against Vizio</a>.
 
While there's a long way to go in this groundbreaking suit, we've already
 
attained an initial <a href="https://sfconservancy.org/news/2022/may/16/vizio-remand-win/">historic victory</a>
 
in succeeding to remand the case back from federal to state court.
 
We've been grateful to see so much support from our Sustainers and communities
 
around the promise our case holds for consumer rights. With the rise of the <a
 
href="https://www.repair.org/">Right to Repair</a> movement, we've seen a
 
growing desire from "everyday consumers" to have the ability to repair the
 
software on their phones and other internet connected devices. Our projects
 
like <a href="https://openwrt.org/">OpenWrt</a> and <a
 
href="https://coreboot.org/">coreboot</a> are integral in giving people the
 
freedom to choose what software runs (and can be repaired) on their own
 
devices. (And speaking of our projects, there's a highlight of what some of
 
projects did this year below!) We also pursued many other violations (that our
 
<a href="https://sfconservancy.org/copyleft-compliance/principles.html">Principles</a>
 
don't permit us to disclose at the moment) and launched a <a href="https://sfconservancy.org/news/2022/may/02/conservancy-launches-copyright-assignment-system/">self-service
 
copyright assignment form</a> so that FOSS contributors can, without overly
 
burdensome paperwork, entrust their copyrights to a nonprofit dedicated to
 
software freedom and rights of users all over the world.</p>
 

	
 
<p>As software based technology becomes more pervasive in our lives, it's vital
 
that we communicate the importance of software freedom to the wider population.
 
In that vein <a href="https://sfconservancy.org/news/2022/may/12/introduction/">we've created a video</a>
 
(narrated by our Executive Director Karen Sandler) that introduces
 
the ideas of software freedom, and specifically what Software Freedom
 
Conservancy does. We also did a lot of public writings about some of the
 
important issues this year. From <a href="https://sfconservancy.org/blog/2022/mar/30/neo4j-v-purethink-open-source-affero-gpl/">interesting legal developments</a>
 
to <a href="https://sfconservancy.org/blog/2022/feb/01/biden-foss-security-sbom-copyleft-right-to-repair/">political outreach</a>
 
as well as <a href="https://sfconservancy.org/news/2022/jul/18/foss-for-sale-in-ms-app-store/">leading a conversation</a>
 
standing up for developers and distributors of free software.</p>
 

	
 
<div style="overflow: auto">
 
<div class="picture-small right">
 
  <a href="https://sfconservancy.org/videos/sfc-introduction_1080p.mp4"><img src="https://sfconservancy.org/videos/sfc-introduction-video_poster.jpg" alt="Thumbnail of video showing a tree and Software Freedom" /></a>
 
</div>
 

	
 
<p>As software based technology becomes more pervasive in our lives, it's vital
 
that we communicate the importance of software freedom to the wider population.
 
In that vein <a href="https://sfconservancy.org/news/2022/may/12/introduction/">we've created a video</a>
 
(narrated by our Executive Director Karen Sandler) that introduces
 
the ideas of software freedom, and specifically what Software Freedom
 
Conservancy does. We also did a lot of public writings about some of the
 
important issues this year. From <a href="https://sfconservancy.org/blog/2022/mar/30/neo4j-v-purethink-open-source-affero-gpl/">interesting legal developments</a>
 
to <a href="https://sfconservancy.org/blog/2022/feb/01/biden-foss-security-sbom-copyleft-right-to-repair/">political outreach</a>
 
as well as <a href="https://sfconservancy.org/news/2022/jul/18/foss-for-sale-in-ms-app-store/">leading a conversation</a>
 
standing up for developers and distributors of free software.</p> </div>
 

	
 
<p>We also started a campaign to <b><a href="https://giveupgithub.org">Give Up
 
GitHub</a></b>. With more and more corporate interest and investment into FOSS,
 
we see a trend of community resources being bought up and controlled by
 
singular corporate entities. Having lived through multiple acquisitions and
 
extinctions of gratis code forges before, GitHub is just the most recent holder
 
of the title. Contrary to it's namesake project, <a href="https://git-scm.com/">git</a>
 
GitHub remains a proprietary, centralized
 
and hierarchical method of working on software. Stripping the underlying power
 
and versatility that has allowed it to become the canonical tool for
 
distributed software development. A single corporation controlling this piece
 
of critical infrastructure is clearly a harmful idea, a corporation will always
 
serve it's shareholders and not the community that it depends on growing and
 
keeping within it's walled garden. Please check out our <a href="https://sfconservancy.org/blog/2022/jun/30/give-up-github-launch/">blog post</a>
 
about the issue to find alternatives and other ways you can help this
 
divestment effort.</p>
 
</div>
 

	
 
<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
 
  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
 
rounds!) We're grateful to be able support Outreachy to serve more
 
communities who are committed to helping to push back against systemic
 
underrepresentation in technology and software.</p>
 

	
 
<p><b>Godot</b> has continued to push the boundary of what anyone thought was
 
  possible with an open source game engine.  Godot's impressive team, funded
 
  through contracts with Software Freedom Conservancy, continues to building
 
  their community and their excellent codebase.  We are so proud of their beneficial
 
  <a href="https://godotengine.org/community">focus on community</a>.  Watch
 
  their fun, exciting,
 
  and <a href="https://godotengine.org/article/announcing-2021-godot-games-showreel">brand
 
  new showreel</a> to see what these cutting edge creators are making.</p>
 

	
 
<p>Software Freedom Conservancy also proudly supports, with direct funding of
 
  contributors, the <b>Reproducible Builds</b> team.  They ensure the
 
  security of computer systems of all shapes and sizes around the world.
 
  This necessary and vital project becomes even more essential in the age of
 
  direct attacks on technological
 
  infrastructure. The <a href="https://reproducible-builds.org/tools/">tools
 
  they've made</a> are freely available to help others increase
 
  reproducibility in their own projects.</p>
 

	
 
<p><b>OpenWrt</b> recently had their OpenWrt 21.02 release &mdash; which
 
  increases the default security options including optional SELinux
 
  and <acronym title="Address Space Layout Randomization">ASLR</acronym>. 
 
  OpenWrt empowers users to run a free
 
  operating system on their routers.  Combined with <a href="#dmca-exemptions">our DMCA exemption</a>,
 
  the landscape of free firmware is now much easier to explore and
 
  deploy.  Meanwhile, another of our projects, <b>coreboot</b>, has further grown the supported hardware
 
  list for freeing your bootloader. These two projects are at the core of
 
  our <a href="https://sfconservancy.org/copyleft-compliance/firmware-liberation.html">firmware
 
  liberation initiative</a>. As our work continues,  more companies will learn
 
  what most router companies already know: consumers
 
  prefer hardware that can run copylefted software and &mdash; contrary to
 
  popular belief &mdash; will gladly pay <em>more</em>  for hardware that
 
  respects their rights and freedoms!</p>
 

	
 
<p><b>The Institute for Computing in Research</b> has furthered its mission.
 
  After two successful rounds of interns in Santa Fe, New Mexico,
 
  <acronym title="The Institute for Computing in Research">ICR</acronym>
 
  expanded its intern cohort to include a selection of six high school
 
  students in Portland, Oregon. These unique paid internships introduce high
 
  school students to software freedom as part of a summer research position
 
  that focuses on introducing young scholars to computing in areas of
 
  physical science, life science, social science, arts, and
 
  humanities. Supported by academics at Portland State University, Reed
 
  College, and Oregon State University, the cohort in Portland has projects
 
  in computational biology, natural language processing, pure math, and AI
 
  and game theory. </p>
 
  <p>For the second year in a row, we've raised, administered and/or
 
     facilitated $1.7 million to improve software freedom directly! This
 
     includes contractors, interns and students, administrators, and grants
 
     for creation, distribution and maintenance of free software projects.
 
     Part of the unique position of our organization is the expertise
 
     necessary to do this kind of work.</p>
 

	
 
<p><b>Outreachy</b> accepted 61 interns in the December 2021 cohort, and 67 interns in
 
the May 2022 cohort with over 30 Free and Open Source software communities.
 
Bringing in new communities in the Open Science and Humanitarian spheres,
 
Outreachy continues to lead the way in providing opportunities to historically
 
excluded and under represented people in technology. With over 900 interns
 
accepted to the program to date, Outreachy continues to grow and expand it's
 
community. Outreachy also hired a new community manager, Omotola Omotayo.
 
Having recently <a href="https://sfconservancy.org/news/2022/nov/16/omotola-sca-award/">won an
 
award at the She Code Africa Summit</a>, her work building up and promoting the
 
Outreachy community has been immensely successful.  Outreachy increased the
 
stipend it pays its interns this year, improved its documentation and held many
 
more opportunities for interns and applicants to learn about Outreachy, FOSS
 
and how to successfully engage in the tech industry.</p>
 

	
 
<p>A few of our projects put on or are planning to put on conferences. <b>Git</b>
 
Merge was held in Chicago in September. It provided a great face to face space
 
for the international group of developers to come together, decide on some
 
technical directions and have other conversations that are greatly sped up by
 
in person meeting. <b>Wine</b>Conf was held simultaneously with the X.Org developer's
 
conference and FOSS XR in Minneapolis the first week of October. The twelfth <a
 
href="https://con.racket-lang.org/">RacketCon</a> was run at the end of
 
October. <a href="https://reproducible-builds.org/">Reproducible Builds</a> had their summit in the beginning of November in
 
Venice. We're also working with the <b>Selenium</b> project on their <a href="https://seleniumconf.com/">upcoming conference</a>
 
March 28-30 2023.</p>
 

	
 
<p><b>OpenWrt</b> just released <a href="https://openwrt.org/releases/22.03/notes-22.03.2">version 22.03.02</a>
 
which added some more hardware support and fixed security bugs. This 22.03
 
release had some major changes like moving from iptables to nftables, adding
 
over 180 new devices to support over 1580 total devices! Some great quality of
 
life enhancements like dark mode in LuCL (Pono, who's the primary author of
 
this text, was really happy about this one) and they've solved Year 2038
 
problem which if you remember Y2K, is a sigh of relief to not scramble to
 
patch.</p>
 

	
 
<p><a href="https://computinginresearch.org/">The Institute for Computing in
 
Research</a> completed it's first round in Austin, Texas. Now providing
 
training, education and real world software experience to high school students
 
in 3 cities and exploring additional cities that may join next summer. These
 
research internships are a great way for high school students to get involved
 
in real academic research while also being exposed to the ideas and principles
 
of software freedom.</p>
 

	
 
<p>And in a happy close of a member project relationship, <a href="https://godotengine.org/">Godot</a>
 
has <a href="https://sfconservancy.org/news/2022/nov/01/godot-graduates/">graduated from Conservancy</a>
 
to <a href="https://godotengine.org/article/godots-graduation-godot-moves-to-a-new-foundation">start its own foundation</a>.
 
Our relationship with Godot was built on a shared
 
passion for community building in the free software space and we expect this
 
will continue as they grow into their own. Modeling their governance on the
 
system that we built together here are Conservancy, we are extremely proud of
 
what they have become and expect great things to come out of their new
 
organization and look forward to continue our relationship in an advisory
 
capacity.</p>
 

	
 
</div>
 

	
 
<h3 id="NewStaff">New staff!</h3>
 
<div data-read-more="Click more for on our new staff&hellip;">
 

	
 
<p>At the end of last year, we
 
  hired <a href="/news/2020/dec/02/sharp-newest-employee/">Sage Sharp</a> as
 
  Senior Director of Diversity &amp; Inclusion; they about to complete their
 
  first year with us. Meanwhile, finishing up his first six months
 
  is <a href="/blog/2021/may/18/pono-introduction/">Daniel
 
  Pono Takamori</a>, our Community Organizer &amp; Non-Profit Problem
 
  Solver.  These two are very welcome additions to our team of <em>just five</em>
 
  full-time employees, and <em>one</em> part-time employee. We are proud of the
 
  breadth of skills and dedication of our team.</p>
 

	
 
<p>As a testament to &ldquo;practice what you preach&rdquo;, we undertook
 
  what we consider a fair and equitable hiring process which our executive
 
  director
 
  Karen <a href="/blog/2021/oct/15/equitable-hiring/">described
 
  in detail on our website</a>. We
 
  lead by example &mdash; with transparency and casting a wide net to avoid just hiring within our circles.</p>
 

	
 
<p>We also updated our website &mdash; hopefully, you'll find it easier to
 
use and that it better conveys our mission and work.  Our chat platform moved
 
to <a href="/blog/2021/jun/21/chat-options/">XMPP</a>. Bridging to IRC and
 
Matrix is supported, so you are welcome to join with whatever client you like
 
(unlike other &ldquo;Loose&rdquo; options).  Throughout the seemingly-endless video
 
chatting during the pandemic, we have been one of only two FOSS organizations
 
who insist on using FOSS video chat platforms like Big Blue Button.  We are
 
committed to using free software for communication and demonstrating that
 
organizations of all sizes can make the same commitment.</p>
 
<p>SFC hired an additional employee this year! <a href="https://sfconservancy.org/about/staff/#tracy">Tracy Homer</a>
 
is our new Operations Manager. Outside of Tracy's' work with SFC, she is
 
studying GIS at the University of Tennessee and is a board member of her local
 
hackerspace. We're so excited to have someone to with her set of skills help us
 
build out our organization. Helping out with everything from international
 
banking and tax questions, to conference planning, Tracy's been an incredible
 
addition to our team. She rounds out our team to 7 people (largest we've ever
 
been!).</p>
 

	
 
</div>
 

	
 
<h3 id="WritingAndSpeaking">Writing and Speaking</h3>
 
<div data-read-more="Find out about our writing and speaking engagements&hellip;">
 

	
 
<p>Software Freedom Conservancy team members published important writings
 
  this year to both share essential historical context and modern
 
  interpretations.  Denver Gingerich wrote about
 
  the <a href="/blog/2021/mar/25/install-gplv2/">installation requirement for
 
  the GPLv2</a>. Bradley M. Kuhn documented the historical record in his
 
  related piece
 
  about <a href="/blog/2021/jul/23/tivoization-and-the-gpl-right-to-install/">&ldquo;Tivoization&rdquo;
 
  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
 
  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
 
  that we've come to expect from our big
 
  conference gatherings. We can't wait to get back to a sense of normalcy and
 
  at least have a little less latency between us.</p>
 

	
 
<p>Karen, our executive director, gave two keynotes this year, one at the <a href="/news/2021/mar/23/karen-lailec-2021/">Leuven AI Law &amp; Ethics Conference</a> and another at <a href="https://conf.linuxappsummit.org/event/3/contributions/71/">Linux App Summit</a>. Karen also spoke with Marina Zhurakhinskaya at <cite>All Things Open</cite> about the 10+ year history of Outreachy. Karen was also an invited speaker at <a href="https://heales.org/2021/05/28/conference-big-data-a-i-and-healthy-longevity-how-to-progress-faster-and-better-for-all-scientists-thursday-september-9-2021/">Big Data, A.I. and Healthy Longevity: How to progress faster and better for all scientists</a>.</p>
 

	
 
<p>Karen and Bradley were also co-organizers (with others) of the Legal &amp;
 
  Policy Devroom at FOSDEM, where they also moderated panels and spoke.
 
  Daniel Pono Takamori gave a talk
 
  about <cite><a href="http://pdxlinux.org/2021-07-01-FreeSoftware-LegacyOfCommunication.pdf">How
 
  Free Software Continues the Legacy of Open Communication</a></cite> to the
 
  Portland Linux/ Unix Group.</p>
 

	
 
<p>We were also a sponsor of the
 
fantastic <a href="https://seagl.org/">SeaGL</a> event. A community focused
 
conference that does an incredible job giving opportunities to first-time
 
speakers (suitable for community members of all walks of life). They hosted
 
their conference on the Matrix platform, which further proved it's possible
 
to run a virtual conference with free software.</p>
 
<p>Our staff has been presenting and speaking about software freedom all year.
 
Our Executive Director Karen Sandler gave a remote keynote address at the 2022
 
Public Domain & Open Source SW License Conference in Seoul, Korea. We also
 
<a href="https://av.sfconservancy.org/vizio-update-from-karen.mp4">published a talk</a>
 
Karen gave to update folks on the Vizio law suit. Karen was also at
 
All Things Open for the <a href="https://2022.allthingsopen.org/sessions/open-source-law-policy-and-practice-book-panel/">Open Source Law Policy and Practice Book Panel</a>.
 
She was joined other experts who
 
contributed to <a href="https://academic.oup.com/book/44727">the book</a> and
 
they had a conversation about current state and best practice for legal policy
 
around free and open source software in addition to conducting a book signing
 
(You can check out another book that Karen contributed a chapter to along with
 
Marie Moe, <a href="https://www.amazon.com/Modified-Living-Chris-Hables-Gray/dp/0815364016">"Modified: Living as a Cyborg"</a>,
 
which became more widely available this year.)</p>
 

	
 
<div style="overflow: auto">
 
<div class="picture-small left">
 
  <img src="/img/scalex19-booth.jpg" alt="Booth with banners and merch at SCaLEx19" />
 
  <p>Pono took a photo of the SFC booth at SCaLEx19</p>
 
</div></div>
 

	
 
<p>Pono gave a <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zrJX1XYICmc">keynote at
 
Git Merge</a> this October. Speaking on how the Git project is a canonical
 
model for free software development and the ways it teaches by leading the way.
 
He also boothed at <a href="https://www.socallinuxexpo.org/scale/19x">SCaLE
 
19x</a>, which was great to have the community centered conference back in
 
action.</p>
 

	
 

	
 
<p>Sage spoke at the September 2022 Chan-Zuckerberg Initiative EOSS, sharing
 
advice on how Outreachy has improved its own inclusive processes, and the group
 
discussed potential solutions for unresolved DEI issues in open science
 
communities. Karen and Bradley co-organized the FOSDEM Legal & Policy DevRoom,
 
which was held remotely. In addition to helping to organize the room, they also
 
participated in a panel with the other organizers about the most critical
 
topics facing FOSS today. SFC staffers also participate in key meetings to
 
represent community interests in a variety of FOSS related discussions
 
concerning security, governmental use of FOSS and in critical infrastructure
 
discussions and also presented in classroom to educate students about software
 
freedom.</p>
 

	
 

	
 
</div>
 

	
...
 
@@ -274,77 +296,12 @@ to run a virtual conference with free software.</p>
 
  software freedom that the world needs. <a href="/donate/">Please consider
 
  donating now!</a></p>
 

	
 

	
 
<div style="overflow: auto">
 
<div class="picture-small right">
 
  <img src="/img/scaled-LLW-2015-Conservancy-Supporters-by-Carlo-Piana-CC-0.jpg" alt="Zack, Karen, John and Jim pose, mostly wearing the vintage t-shirt!" />
 
  <p>Vintage-shirt-wearing Sustainers pose with Karen! <br/>From left: Stefano &ldquo;Zack&rdquo; Zacchiroli, Karen M. Sandler, John Sullivan, and Jim Wright</p>
 
</div>
 

	
 
<div data-read-more="A note on t-shirts&hellip;">
 
<p>We're all sick of hearing about supply chains, global shortages, and
 
  deliveries being delayed. But we must tell you up-front that since we have
 
  a small staff we try to batch our t-shirt orders, and given the realities
 
  of the pandemic, we are often a few months behind on t-shirt deliveries.
 
  Those owed t-shirts from early 2021 renewals should receive them by years'
 
  end.  Meanwhile, we're working on a new t-shirt design for this year; check
 
  back here for an announcement later in the fundraising season!  All
 
  renewals during this fundraising season will receive the new shirt!  We so
 
  appreciate everyone's patience! </p>
 
</div>
 

	
 
<h3 id="VintageT">Vintage T-Shirt Promotion</h3>
 
<div data-read-more="Would you like a last chance to receive a vintage Conservancy t-shirt?  Find out how&hellip;">
 

	
 
<p>If you're a Sustainer, you've already received or will soon receive a
 
  t-shirt in our 2018 design shown here.   But,
 
would you like to take advantage of a last chance to get our vintage design &mdash; seen sported so often
 
by <a href="https://twitter.com/bensturmfels/status/599118574641262592">our earliest Sustainers</a> at <a href="https://twitter.com/conservancy/status/786480068512002048">conferences and events</a>?  If so, read on!</p>
 

	
 
<div class="picture-tiny left">
 
<img src="/img/brett-in-2018-shirt.jpg" alt="Brett wears the 2018 t-shirt!" />
 
<p><a href="/about/staff/#brett">Brett Smith</a> wears the current t-shirt design.</p>
 
</div>
 

	
 
<p><strong>UPDATE: Just give $256 total for this year's fundraiser and
 
    receive an additional vintage T-shirt!</strong></p>
 

	
 
<p>But first, as a note to how difficult this year has been, we know that many of our 2019 Sustainers are still
 
awaiting their t-shirts, which have the wonderful 2018 design.   We've had difficulty working through
 
keeping our staff safe during the pandemic lock downs and making trips to the post office &mdash; historically,
 
we on staff all shared the post office trips, but we all have different COVID-19 risk factors and thus it's all moving
 
slowly.  We appreciate the patience of our Sustainers waiting for t-shirts, and we do have plan to safely send out
 
the backlog by years' end.</p>
 

	
 
<p>As part of those preparations, we found a treasure trove and now have an exciting promotion for renewing
 
Sustainers.  We found an old stash of <strong>vintage t-shirts</strong>, in the old style!  Supplies are limited,
 
but for those few sustainers who would like to receive one, we have a special offer.  Sustainers who give
 
$256 or more between 2020-01-15 and 2021-01-15 can receive one of these vintage t-shirts!  To claim your vintage t-shirt, do the following:
 

	
 
<div class="picture-tiny right">
 
  <img src="/img/2019-08-26_Neil-alone_GUADECSupporterNight.jpg" alt="Neil McGovern, Executive Director of the GNOME Foundation, wears the vintage t-shirt!" />
 
  <p>Neil McGovern wearing that stylish vintage shirt!</p>
 
</div>
 

	
 
    <ul>
 
    <li>Renew as a <a href="/sustainer/#annual">an annual sustainer</a> for $256 or more. (Alternatively, if
 
      you already gave this year, make a <a href="/donate/">separate donation</a> so that your 2020 total is $256.)</li>
 
      <li> <a href="mailto:vintaget@sfconservancy.org">Email &lt;vintaget@sfconservancy.org&gt;</a> and include the email
 
      address and date(s) of your donation(s) that total $256 and your
 
        desired size.  (We have all sizes <strong>except MenM</strong> in
 
      stock.   Supplies <em>are</em> limited; we cannot necessarily guarantee
 
      your size selection, and we'll continue to update here as sizes run out.)</li>
 
      </ul></p>
 

	
 
<div class="picture-small left">
 
  <img src="/img/2020-12-04_lots-vintage-shirts.jpg" alt="A big stack of vintage Conservancy t-shirts!" />
 
  <p>Supplies won't last; give $256 and make one of these vintage shirts yours today!</p>
 
</div>
 

	
 
<p>You too can look cool in the vintage design.  Or maybe your original has faded and you're ready to spruce up with a new one?  As we said,
 
supplies are limited so make a big donation today, support Conservancy, and show you've always been old-school &mdash; or just
 
want to look that way!</p>
 
</div>
 

	
 
</div>
 
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