ICSE 2024
Fri 12 - Sun 21 April 2024 Lisbon, Portugal
Fri 19 Apr 2024 11:00 - 11:15 at Luis de Freitas Branco - Human and Social 6 Chair(s): Sarah Fakhoury

It is now commonplace for organizations to pay developers to work on specific open source software (OSS) projects to pursue their business goals. Such paid developers work alongside voluntary contributors, but given the different motivations of these two groups of developers, conflict may arise, which may pose a threat to a project’s sustainability. This paper presents an empirical study of paid developers and volunteers in Rust, a popular open source programming language project. Rust is a particularly interesting case given considerable concerns about corporate participation. We compare volunteers and paid developers through contribution characteristics and long-term participation, and solicit volunteers’ perceptions on paid developers. We find that core paid developers tend to contribute more frequently; commits contributed by one-time paid developers have bigger sizes; peripheral paid developers implement more features; and being paid plays a positive role in becoming a long-term contributor. We also find that volunteers do have some prejudices against paid developers. This study suggests that the dichotomous view of paid vs. volunteer developers is too simplistic and that further subgroups can be identified. Companies should become more sensitive to how they engage with OSS communities, in certain ways as suggested by this study.

Fri 19 Apr

Displayed time zone: Lisbon change

11:00 - 12:30
11:00
15m
Talk
How Are Paid and Volunteer Open Source Developers Different? A Study of the Rust Project
Research Track
Yuxia Zhang Beijing Institute of Technology, Mian Qin Beijing Institute of Technology, Klaas-Jan Stol Lero; University College Cork; SINTEF Digital , Minghui Zhou Peking University, Hui Liu Beijing Institute of Technology
Pre-print
11:15
15m
Talk
Barriers for Students During Code Change Comprehension
Research Track
Justin Middleton North Carolina State University, John-Paul Ore North Carolina State University, Kathryn Stolee North Carolina State University
11:30
15m
Talk
SERGE – Serious Game for the Education of Risk Management in Software Project Management
Software Engineering Education and Training
Giusy Annunziata University of Salerno, Stefano Lambiase University of Salerno, Fabio Palomba University of Salerno, Filomena Ferrucci University of Salerno
Pre-print
11:45
15m
Talk
Equitable Student Collaboration in Pair Programming
Software Engineering Education and Training
Isabella Graßl University of Passau, Gordon Fraser University of Passau
12:00
15m
Talk
Scalable Teaching of Software Engineering Theory and Practice: An Experience Report
Software Engineering Education and Training
12:15
7m
Talk
Relationship Between Diversity of Collaborative Group Members’ Race and Ethnicity and the Frequency of their Collaborative Contributions in GitHub
Journal-first Papers
Sheik Shameer University of Waterloo, Gema Rodríguez-Pérez University of British Columbia (UBC), Mei Nagappan University of Waterloo
12:22
7m
Talk
Does Code Review Speed Matter for Practitioners?
Journal-first Papers
Gunnar Kudrjavets Amazon Web Services, USA, Ayushi Rastogi University of Groningen, The Netherlands
Link to publication DOI Pre-print