SEApr 4

Mapping GitHub Sponsorships: A Longitudinal Observatory for Open-Source Sustainability

arXiv:2604.0384623.9h-index: 6Has Code
AI Analysis

For researchers and practitioners studying open-source sustainability, this provides a new tool to analyze funding patterns, though the contribution is primarily infrastructural.

The paper introduces a live observatory for tracking GitHub Sponsorships, addressing the lack of bulk API access. A 72-hour sample captured 49K+ users across 144 countries, revealing strong participation asymmetries and geographic concentration.

Financial sustainability is vital for open-source software, yet systematic research on funding remains limited. GitHub Sponsors, launched in 2019 as a direct developer-to-developer funding model, lacks bulk API access, hindering large-scale studies. This paper introduces a live, continuously operating observatory for tracking and analyzing the GitHub Sponsors ecosystem. The observatory performs priority-based graph traversal with daily incremental updates, real-time normalization, and exposes collected data through an interactive dashboard and analysis-ready CSV exports. A sample dataset collected during a 72-hour run captures 49K+ users across 144 countries and serves as an example of the tool's output, not a fixed deliverable. An interactive dashboard (https://github-sponsorships.com) enables practitioners and researchers to explore sponsorship patterns, filter by geography and demographics, and benchmark against funded peers. Preliminary results on the sample show strong participation asymmetries and geographic concentration, suggesting several research directions.

Foundations

The foundational work for this paper's niche, ranked by how specifically the neighbourhood builds on it — not by global fame.

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