ICSE 2024
Fri 12 - Sun 21 April 2024 Lisbon, Portugal
Thu 18 Apr 2024 11:00 - 11:15 at Almada Negreiros - Human and Social 4 Chair(s): Tamara Lopez

GitHub Sponsors was launched in 2019, enabling donations to open-source software developers to provide financial support, as per GitHub’s slogan: “Invest in the projects you depend on”. However, a 2022 study on GitHub Sponsors found that only two-fifths of developers who were seeking sponsorship received a donation. The study found that, other than internal actions (such as offering perks to sponsors), developers had advertised their GitHub Sponsors profiles on social media, such as Twitter (also known as X). Therefore, in this work, we investigate the impact of tweets that contain links to GitHub Sponsors profiles on sponsorship, as well as their reception on Twitter/X. We further characterize these tweets to understand their context and find that (1) such tweets have the impact of increasing the number of sponsors acquired, (2) compared to other donation platforms such as Open Collective and Patreon, GitHub Sponsors has significantly fewer interactions but is more visible on Twitter/X, and (3) developers tend to contribute more to open-source software during the week of posting such tweets. Our findings are the first step toward investigating the impact of social media on obtaining funding to sustain open-source software.

Thu 18 Apr

Displayed time zone: Lisbon change

11:00 - 12:30
11:00
15m
Talk
“My GitHub Sponsors profile is live!” Investigating the Impact of Twitter/X Mentions on GitHub Sponsors
Research Track
Youmei Fan Nara Institute of Science and Technology, Tao Xiao Nara Institute of Science and Technology, Hideaki Hata Shinshu University, Christoph Treude Singapore Management University, Kenichi Matsumoto Nara Institute of Science and Technology
Pre-print Media Attached
11:15
15m
Talk
A Theory of Scientific Programming Efficacy
Research Track
Elizaveta Pertseva Stanford University, Melinda Chang Canyon Crest Academy, Ulia Zaman University of California, Irvine, Michael Coblenz University of California, San Diego
Link to publication
11:30
15m
Talk
Coding to Cope: Teaching Programming to Children with Emotional and Behavioral Disorders
Software Engineering Education and Training
Isabella Graßl University of Passau, Gordon Fraser University of Passau
11:45
15m
Talk
Beyond Self-Promotion: How Software Engineering Research Is Discussed on LinkedInACM SIGSOFT Distinguished Paper Award (SEIS Track)
Software Engineering in Society
Marvin Wyrich Saarland University, Justus Bogner Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam
Pre-print
12:00
7m
Talk
Extended Abstract of "Do Attention and Memory Explain the Performance of Software Developers?"
Journal-first Papers
Valentina Piantadosi University of Molise, Simone Scalabrino University of Molise, Alexander Serebrenik Eindhoven University of Technology, Nicole Novielli University of Bari, Rocco Oliveto University of Molise
12:07
7m
Talk
Understanding Mentors’ Engagement in OSS Communities via Google Summer of Code
Journal-first Papers
Xin Tan Beihang University, Minghui Zhou Peking University, Li Zhang Beihang University
12:14
7m
Talk
Coding with a Creative Twist: Investigating the Link Between Creativity Scores and problem-solving Strategies
New Ideas and Emerging Results
Mahta Amini Polytechnique Montreal, Jay A. Olson University of Toronto Mississauga, Zohreh Sharafi Polytechnique Montréal