On Mon, May 22, 2017 at 2:01 PM, mdn <bernardlprf@openmailbox.org> wrote:

> The thing is, is that one wants to avoid to be persecuted you have to:
> -Avoid electronic money (or at least one that doesn't tie your real name
> too it).
> -Having your name tied to the project it (staying anonymous)
> -Having people who don't have a lot to loose (if they can stay anonymous
> this isn't a big problem).
> -Having a server that won't reveal the ID of the people participating on
> the project (Tor or GNUnet only)
> There are some projects that exist already on these mesh networks.

Crowdfunding and anonymity DO NOT go together.

I'm not backing a project from some random hacker via bitcoin or Western Union, nope not going to happen.

There are enough problems with crowdfunding campaigns that aren't anonymous, the way I see it.


I'd crowdfund a legitimate (non-anonymous campaign) to (A) raise awareness for the need of FOSS graphics drivers, (B) help fund a legal group to make it easier for hackers and hobbyists to reverse engineer what they have purchased, or (C) raise funds to help individuals like Luc Verhaegen that have gotten smeared but want to keep fighting.  Or (D) if anyone in a matter of years/decades/whatever is crazy enough to attempt a completely FOSS GPU core which won't come cheap or easy.  Something like Project VGA but scaled up in complexity and down in size.

But that's about it.  Other people's mileage many vary.  But being that Wikipedia and other sources aren't even really mentioning all of the litigation and smearing going on, I'd suggest to start by maybe getting the word out, maybe edit a few wikipedia pages to make that a bit more apparent.  I don't even see it mentioned in the talk pages.  This group was literally the first time that I've heard of it.