I know this might be offtopic, but people on this list seem likely to be interested or know people who are. Please feel free to forward.
Wikimedia Foundation is hiring people to: * write code to try new ways to encourage people to edit Wikipedia (Growth engineerhttp://hire.jobvite.com/CompanyJobs/Careers.aspx?c=qSa9VfwQ&cs=9UL9Vfwt&page=Job%20Description&j=o8NJXfwl)
* keep our users' data safe (operations security engineerhttp://hire.jobvite.com/CompanyJobs/Careers.aspx?c=qSa9VfwQ&cs=9UL9Vfwt&page=Job%20Description&j=oT6cYfwT)
* make sure our designers and multimedia engineers build the right things (multimedia product managerhttp://hire.jobvite.com/CompanyJobs/Careers.aspx?c=qSa9VfwQ&cs=9UL9Vfwt&page=Job%20Description&j=oG4pYfwR ) * automate more of the systems that help developers test new code to find bugs early (Test Infrastructure Engineerhttp://hire.jobvite.com/CompanyJobs/Careers.aspx?c=qSa9VfwQ&cs=9UL9Vfwt&page=Job%20Description&j=oFtlYfwb)
* like 19 jobs total - check out https://wikimediafoundation.org/wiki/Work_with_us
(Many WMF workers, including me, telecommute. You might also like our Pluralism, internationalism, and diversity policyhttps://wikimediafoundation.org/wiki/Pluralism,_internationalism,_and_diversity_policy.)
And of course everything you make at the Wikimedia Foundation is freely licensed, so you can suggest your buddies use it to solve their problems, write public blog posts about it, talk about it at parties and conferences, and link to it on your résumé. Isn't open source nice?
Thanks!
Sumana Harihareswara Engineering Community Manager Wikimedia Foundation
P.S. We also list these jobs in the monthly engineering report which gets mailed to this list.