Marathon Patent Group (MARA) announced Thursday it will bankroll the work of Bitcoin Core developer Jonas Schnelli. The year-long grant is worth $96,000, payable in bitcoin.
Previously, Bitmain funded Schnelliâs work before nixing his and otherâs grants last year, something Marathon Patent Group highlighted in its correspondence with CoinDesk.
âBitmain cancelled all of their funding for [Schnelli and other developers]â¦which left Jonas seeking a new grant,â Merrick Okamoto, Marathonâs chairman and CEO, told CoinDesk.
âIt feels amazing that the community has each othersâ back. I sent a single tweet (that I lost the Bitcoin sponsorship) and things moved super fast,â Schnelli told CoinDesk.
In a press release, Okamoto commented, âWe believe it is essential that we do our part to help advance the Bitcoin network. Absent core developers like Jonas, Bitcoinâs efficacy and long-term adoption, and therefore our business, could be impacted. This grant will allow Jonas to continue his important work on our collective behalf.â
The funding is crucial for an open-source project like Bitcoin that has no company or central entity backing it, and itâs coming from a grassroots movement of Bitcoin companies following each otherâs leads to give back part of their profits to the developer community.
Schnelli has been contributing to Bitcoin Core since 2013 and his 516 commits make him the the ninth most active developer on the Bitcoin Core code. Along with his work on the Bitcoin source code, he has created a code library for creating Bitcoin applications in the C coding language and helped design the BitBox hardware wallet.
In addition to this grant, Schnelli also has 55 individual sponsors on GitHub.
Schnelli told CoinDesk that heâll use the new funding âto work on Bitcoin Core, mainly on maintenance and usability.â Namely, heâd like to finish up a working version of Bitcoin Improvement Proposal 324 for encrypted peer-to-peer messaging between Bitcoin nodes, along with âproposing a Simplified Payment Verification mode (SPV) for Bitcoin Coreâ and working on Bitcoin Core CI scripts.
Another Bitcoin developer, João Barbosa, had his funding from Bitmain revoked at the same time as Schnelli, but Barbosa bounced back at the end of 2020 when he received one of Coinbaseâs first Crypto Community Fund grants.
Schnelli and Barbosaâs positions are not uncommon.Â
Before last year, most all open-source developers in Bitcoin volunteered their time to work on the Bitcoin software and protocol. Others were lucky enough to be hired by a well-capitalized firm like Blockstream or Chaincode Labs, but most never received compensation for their work.
Now, dozens of open source protocol developers and software designers are on the payrolls of Marathon, Coinbase, BitMEX, Kraken, OKCoin, Square Crypto, Gemini and Human Rights Foundation, among others.Â
Update (18:42 UTC): This article has been updated with quotes and information from Marathon Patent Group.
Update (19:16 UTC): This article has been updated with quotes from Jonas Schnelli.