2012 has come and gone, and we have accomplished many incredible things together. Our little corner of the Internet has changed the way people teach and share information with their peers. This has become a place to share the interests you are passionate about — a place to get better what you do, and you do it all with a bit of fun and humor and a chance to show off a bit on occasion.

But the biggest motivation that drives what we do is a sense of purpose — a sense that we are all doing something really important here. Stack Exchange isn’t created from the hard work of one individual. It takes the collective effort of much larger community working together.
That’s why we take this time of year to remember why we are here. This is the time we set aside to give back to the community.
It has been a tradition at Stack Exchange to make a $100 donation to charity on behalf of each community moderator. When the invitations are sent, watching the outpouring of charity selections come racing back in real time is breathtaking. Within hours, hundreds of moderators already selected their charity wishes. That kind of outpouring of support is something we can all feel good about.
So… on behalf of the 304 moderators of Stack Exchange, we will be making the the following donations to charity this holiday season:
- The Humane Society — $2,700
- The Red Cross (Sandy Relief) — $3,600
- Wikimedia Foundation — $6,800
- Electronic Frontier Foundation — $6,900
- Doctors Without Borders — $10,400
And to these projects that we use extensively and helped us build our own network of websites:
- HAProxy — $1,000
- OpenSTV — $1,000
- DotNetOpenAuth — $1,000
So here’s to 2012. Here’s to the moderators who volunteer their time, their passion, and their leadership to keep these sites humming. Here’s to the incredibly talented team at Stack Exchange who keeps the gears running and the lights on. And here’s to you — the communities who have worked so hard to become part of this shared vision. You are truly the best in the world at what you do.
Farewell, 2012. Welcome, 2013!




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27 Comments
I’m extremely happy to have been a part of this. Thank you, Stack Exchange, for doing this in the first place :D
Excellent work guys. I’m glad you support those that support you.
Getting that pick-your-donation email has been the best part about being mod. Thank you for doing it!
didn’t seem to have gotten mine this time, or maybe I lost it (haven’t done the appropriate email search) Still wish we could donate to something like The Linux Foundation.
Thank you Stack Exchange for doing these charity works.
Cheers to that!
2012 isn’t _quite_ gone yet!
I was very pleasantly surprised by the email and pleased to direct a contribution to one of the fine charity options. What I like best about the arraignment is that it reflects the reason (I hope) I’m involved in Stack Exchange in the first place: making the world just a little better place. Thanks for everything.
Mods are real diamonds!! :D
Lovely to see you giving back to the community! Merry Christmas Stack Exchange
The fact that you do this is great and I’ve been happy to participate! :D
Kudos .. great work. Proud of being the member of SO.
Second that
I’m very much happy (from *after the first month*). I’d say this every time – “Thank you SE” :-)
Great work. It’s an honor to be part of the SO community.
Thank you SE! Doctors Without Borders have had a major involvement in my country and I’m thrilled for having taken part in the community.
Why did you donate to “The Red Cross (Sandy Relief)”? Charities hate getting these restricted donations which they can spend only in predefined areas. I always give to the charity’s general fund, and let them (the experts on the ground) decide where the money is best spent.
TRiG.
This is really great and I’m always happy for being a part of this great community.
I am really glad that I am part of stack exchange. love the gesture
Awesome. I really like.
Thank you, mods! Thank you, StackOverflow! Merry Christmas!
Nice. Thank You for the generous donation, StackExchange.
good work SE
That is excellent! Great work.
charity is the equivalent of open source in programming.
good job!
Not to be a party pooper, but it says something about the moderators that 27 designated Human Society, and ZERO of them designated any Veteran ones like Wounded Warrior Project.
@Anonymous Moderators only had the five listed charities to choose from.
Well, I agree with Filip Dupanović. I’m glad to see that MSF were on the list. They have an excellent reputation.
TRiG.
It was a wonderful initiative. All the possible choices had merit. Well done!