Work goes on.
As a company, we managed to double revenue for the third year in a row and raise some strategic funding. I'm still learning how to make a quality internet company. We wouldn't be where we're at without the technological progress and innovation from so many other people, projects, and organizations.This year at Hacker Noon, we decided to make our yearly donation $10k, choosing 7 established nonprofits that consistently give more value back to the internet, and 3 less established open source contributors that have a ton of potential.
I'm publishing this list because:These nonprofit organizations and open source projects work towards economically sustainable ways to make a better internet. In one way or another, these donations follow the community-driven Hacker Noon editorial line, where writers and editors have collaborated to publish 75,000+ stories around topics like software development, startups, A.I., cryptocurrency, bitcoin, web development, business, marketing, machine learning, productivity, and more.
. I saw Jimmy Wales give a talk once where he explained his first approach to a digital encyclopedia was to commission experts. That failure led to arguably the greatest crowdsourced knowledge the world has ever seen. Learn, learn, learn. What a knowledge source.
. Electronic freedom blurs governance laws. Digital privacy, free speech and innovation are rights worth protecting. Matching courtesy brings this donation up to $2k total.
(donated ). Leverages the power of Bitcoin and Blockchain technology to create lasting social impact. We are bullish on low transaction fees via crypto could become an engine for good.
. They increase the number of women of color in the digital space by empowering girls of color ages 7 to 17 to become innovators in STEM fields, leaders in their communities, and builders of their own futures through exposure to computer science and technology.
. Her work has moved Rails, EmberJS, jquery and more, forward. Leah's contributions help make Hacker Noon possible.
(donated in BTC). He is a self-confessed 'mad scientist' whose npm packages are downloaded 500M+ times every month. Tim's contributions help make Hacker Noon possible.