I benefit hugely from all sorts of user-funded services I don’t have to pay for: Wikipedia, community social events, news sites, street music, porn, podcasts, green spaces, apps, public radio, etc. I’ve heard these donations called “user fee donations” to distinguish them from maximally altruistic donations.
User fee donations are a terribly expensive way to do good (better to donate to the EA Animal Welfare Fund) and a terribly expensive way to make myself superficially happy (better to buy Flavor-Ice popsicles). But they seem like a potentially affordable — and maybe even necessary — way to buy satisfaction with my contributions to my communities.
Do you donate to optionally user-funded services? Which ones, and how do you decide which ones? How much, and how do you decide how much?
I occasionally donate to user-funded services, but it is very ad-hoc and not a lot of thought goes into deciding which ones. I think I donated to Wikipedia a few years ago, and I donated to a local public radio station once. It usually happens after I use a service for awhile and suddenly think "hmm, I want the people who make that to know I appreciate their service."
I don't think it's ever been anything more than $20. And again, no rigorous decision making process, something about $20 just seems right as an "appreciation donation." The dollar amount might go higher if I ever encountered a user-funded service that I believed needed more from me to stay afloat.
Thanks so much for sharing your perspective! That’s basically what I’ve been doing so far.
But I’ve started feeling the urge often enough that each appreciation donation makes me worried about my overall approach to appreciation donations — which seriously distracts from the warm fuzzies I was trying to buy in the first place.