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Please donate to keep Network Time Protocol up – Goal 1k

ntp.org

312 points by gastonmorixe a month ago · 241 comments

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Aurornis a month ago

This was submitted with a title that doesn’t match the page and is not even accurste (Please donate to keep Network Time Protocol up) is not correct. This donation page is not for the public NTP pool. It’s for the NTP Project organization and their web page.

All of the angry comments from people who think NTP will stop working if the donation bar doesn’t get to $1000 are misinformed. Also note that the bar isn’t updating. It’s been stuck at $365 for myself and others despite donations coming in.

  • dang a month ago

    Not sure what happened here—the submitter is a good contributor, so most likely it was a simple misunderstanding—but yeah, the title shouldn't have been editorialized (https://news.ycombinator.com/newsguidelines.html).

  • jrmg a month ago

    You’re right, people are plainly commenting based on the title.

    The goal has now mysteriously changed to a goal of $4000.

  • phailhaus a month ago

    I see it at $2,130 fifteen minutes after your comment.

    • Aurornis a month ago

      Yes, it’s updating now. Ctrl-F this thread and search for ‘365’ and you’ll see that it was not changing for several hours despite donations rolling in.

  • gastonmorixeOP a month ago

    Oh wow. I’m sorry. I should have done more due diligence and a better title.

    • gastonmorixeOP a month ago

      for the record: it was 300$ of 1k when I saw this site. 12h later it changed to 11k?? what happened no idea.

      • gastonmorixeOP a month ago

        my suggestion: stop donating! unless until they clarify what’s going on. the goal said 1k

  • mmmpetrichor a month ago

    I think maybe the title of this topic post is the main source of misinformation.

    • Aurornis a month ago

      It’s definitely the title. The title is a plain and simple lie.

      • gastonmorixeOP a month ago

        yeah. Lesson learned: never share on HN late at night without paying more attention. I’m sorry guys. It wasn’t my intention at all, I was trying to learn about time syncing and thought they really needed help to keep the site and devs support up. 2 months left and 1k goal looked sad and perfect for us to help. I failed in the title badly and no idea what they are doing by changing the goal. I will dig deeper later. It was 100% my fault. Stop donating. I only hope they are not a scam. :/

Bender a month ago

Rather than money one can donate NTP servers to the pool. [1] It can be a fun learning exercise in setting up a stable stratum-2 time server. One can create graphs from the optional logs.

Why bother? Many of the rabbit holes one could venture down in learning to set up a stable time server can also benefit application servers in terms of latency, responsiveness, learning how to get clients to share resources and so much more. Rather than trying to find cooperative stratum-1 servers, one can start by using each of the Google, Facebook and Apple public stratum-1 servers [2] to get started. They get beat up a lot but most of them are stable most of the time.

Ask your favorite LLM how to set up a public NTP server using NTPD or Chrony. For extra credit play with each of them.

[1] - https://www.ntppool.org/en/join.html

[2] - # grep -E "facebo|goog|appl" /etc/hosts

    17.253.16.253   time.apple.com
    129.134.28.123  time1.facebook.com
    129.134.29.123  time2.facebook.com
    129.134.25.123  time3.facebook.com
    129.134.26.123  time4.facebook.com
    129.134.27.123  time5.facebook.com
    216.239.35.0    time1.google.com
    216.239.35.4    time2.google.com
    216.239.35.8    time3.google.com
    216.239.35.12   time4.google.com
  • tonyarkles a month ago

    One of the really nifty things about having a stratum-1 time server on-site (because... reasons) is those graphs. You can very readily see the subtle temperature-dependence of timing crystals. At the facility I was at there was a large cycle every day during the week and then smaller cycle on each weekend day. Our HVAC system didn't heat/cool the building as much on the weekend when no one was there so the temperature swing -> frequency swing was smaller.

    Really drives home one of my favourite half-jokes: every sensor is a temperature sensor; some of them measure other things too.

  • bigstrat2003 a month ago

    Yep, I encourage everyone to do this (though don't ask an LLM, actually put effort into learning). It's easy and cheap to do. I have been running a server in the NTP pool on a Digital Ocean droplet for years now, costs me only $6 a month.

    • CamperBob2 a month ago

      The people who learn to use LLMs effectively for learning will outcompete you handily. You understand that, right? Tool use is an important skill, arguably among the most important ones we have evolved.

  • dboreham a month ago

    We ran a public NTP server for many years. Then, details hazy, but I think there was a UDP amplification vulnerability that was exploited which upset our transit provider so we took it down. Might be fun to try again though.

    • Analemma_ a month ago

      A fully-patched NTP server should be fine. A lot of tier-2 ISPs were treating their NTP servers as abandonware that never got updates, so they ended up being ripe for UDP amplification attacks, but that was a vulnerability in ancient software, not the protocol.

mhovd a month ago

I am surprised that NTP project is not funded, fully or partially, by larger organizations or governments, given the criticality of the project.

  • nickelpro a month ago

    The reference implementation, while historically important, has largely been displaced by more secure/performant implementations (ntpsec, chrony), or by in-house implementations (Amazon, Google).

    Notably NTPd doesn't support leap-smear, which means those who absolutely must have monotonic time can't use it at all.

    • throw0101d a month ago

      > Notably NTPd doesn't support leap-smear, which means those who absolutely must have monotonic time can't use it at all.

      It should be noted that there currently exists no standard, technical or statutory, for how to do leap smearing. If an event happens and you need to tie your timestamped event logs to the 'greater reality' in some legally binding way there's (AIUI) no way to do that.

      A few years ago there was a draft on the idea:

      * https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/draft-stenn-ntp-leap-smear-...

      And the currently-draft NTPv5 has something about:

      * https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/draft-ietf-ntp-ntpv5/

      Though the flag simply says that the timescale is smeared and not (AFAICT) how it is being done.

      See also perhaps RFC 8633 § 2.7.1:

          […]
      
          Operators who have legal obligations or other strong requirements to
          be synchronized with UTC or civil time SHOULD NOT use leap smearing
          because the distributed time cannot be guaranteed to be traceable to
          UTC during the smear interval.
      
          […]
      
          Any use of leap-smearing servers should be limited to within a
          single, well-controlled environment.  Leap smearing MUST NOT be used
          for public-facing NTP servers, as they will disagree with non-
          smearing servers (as well as UTC) during the leap smear interval, and
          there is no standardized way for a client to detect that a server is
          using leap smearing.  However, be aware that some public-facing
          servers may be configured this way in spite of this guidance.
      
      * https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/rfc8633/
      • colechristensen a month ago

        >If an event happens and you need to tie your timestamped event logs to the 'greater reality' in some legally binding way there's (AIUI) no way to do that.

        TAI (Temps Atomique International), is UTC without leap seconds and is the source of truth for "what time is it"

        I'm finding conflicting reports of being able to actually use TAI on linux but there are several claims of at least specialty setups existing. You would absolutely not want smearing or anything like that in your time synchronization software in this case.

    • mananaysiempre a month ago

      > Those who absolutely must have monotonic time

      ... shouldn’t be using a Unix timestamp, or anything else that’s not a count of SI seconds elapsed since a fixed reference point, to begin with.

      • bobmcnamara a month ago

        Pitch: TAI

        • mananaysiempre a month ago

          Kind of. If you “absolutely must” have monotonic time, though, and also care about NTP, then just pointing to TAI (in DJB’s naïve definition) or GPS time is not enough. You need to make decisions on whether you, for example, would prefer your imprecise seconds to be more even individually or for the aggregate count to be more accurate (NTP of course gets you the latter by default). Dear Sir[1], you have done metrology.

          [1] https://people.csail.mit.edu/rachit/post/you-have-built-a-co..., https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=29891428

          • bobmcnamara a month ago

            I really just want the software time to be as good as the underlying hardware clock...

            ...rather than setting a rather awful minimum performance spec of 10ppm smearing over a leap second day.

            Three lies: Universal - multiple smear implementations, linear vs cosine off the top of my head.

            Coordinated - whose in charge here? Google? Facebook?

            Time - doesn't even try for 1s/s

            UTC is, for all intents and purposes, yet another human readable time zone. And should be treated as such. The underlying hardware problems I have and understand. Don't need the software making it worse.

    • tptacek a month ago

      Who's running ntpsec?

      • mlichvar a month ago

        The major Linux distributions replaced ntp with ntpsec. A better question would be who is still running ntp. I know about FreeBSD and NetBSD.

        ntpsec as a project seems to be doing ok. They are releasing new versions, fix reported issues, accept patches, and develop the code publicly. While ntp still has a huge list of acknowledged but unfixed CVEs.

        • Palomides a month ago

          is that true? ubuntu and red hat for example use chrony or systemd-timesyncd

        • tptacek a month ago

          Which distributions use ntpsec?

          • mlichvar a month ago

            Current Debian, Ubuntu, Fedora, RHEL/CentOS (EPEL) have an ntpsec package, but no ntp package. It's not used by default (that's chrony on most of the distributions), but the users can install it and use it.

      • exasperaited a month ago

        At least in part, someone you really don't want to be running a fork of an important project: ESR.

        • tptacek a month ago

          Oh, no, I mean, I know who's actually behind the project, I'm just wondering if there are any major deployments of it.

        • chocalot a month ago

          I'm out of the loop. What's the issue with using a project that ESR contributes to?

          I am vaguely aware he has some unpopular political beliefs (though exactly what I don't know). Is that it?

          • akerl_ a month ago

            Insofar as racism, homophobia, and sexism are unpopular political beliefs: yes.

            Oh, also he doesn't really "contribute" to tech projects so much as "exists near/within them and writes long form ramblings".

            • chocalot a month ago

              Ah, the person I responded to suggests he runs the project.

              If he just "exists near", I see even less of a case why someone should avoid it.

              But horses for courses, people can choose to avoid for whatever reason.

              • tptacek a month ago

                No, there's a long story behind ntpsec and it's all pretty exhausting and none of it has anything to do with ESR's personal life.

          • exasperaited a month ago

            It's not the issue of using the project, to my mind.

            It is not even his beliefs, though many of them are — to my ears and hopefully to most — quite repugnant.

            It is his attitude, approach, and at various times the kinds of people he attracts.

            As it goes, I've seen him speak, back in the 90s, CatB era. He was genial enough but he seemed to have a coterie around him of rather less pleasant people. It could just have been a bad day but it has stuck in my mind ever since: it was the first time I understood that there's not really any sort of inclsive geek community.

  • simoncion a month ago

    The Network Time Foundation (which counts the NTP project among those it provides resources to) lists several corporate Members.

    But yeah, critical infrastructure usually goes criminally underfunded.

    • NetMageSCW a month ago

      Except they aren’t critical infrastructure which is why no one supports them.

      • simoncion a month ago

        Accurate timekeeping is critical infrastructure. So much so, that the US government operates many radio stations whose sole purpose is to provide current time announcements, reference clocks, and other timekeeping-related information. See [0].

        Relatedly: surely you're not of the opinion that the various GPS constellations are not critical infrastructure?

        [0] <https://www.nist.gov/pml/time-and-frequency-division/time-se...>

        • SAI_Peregrinus a month ago

          Just because other timekeeping projects are critical infrastructure doesn't mean that one NTP client is critical infrastructure.

  • nubinetwork a month ago

    I figured they would be funded by NIST, but the way the US government has been pulling back funding for everything, it didn't surprise me that they need money. Much like Jimmy Wales, I bet if everyone donated 5 bucks they'd be in a much better spot.

  • xigoi a month ago
  • littlestymaar a month ago

    Large tech companies and free-riding critical internet commons, name a better duo.

    • shaky-carrousel a month ago

      That would be easily solved by blocking from NTP any ip address belonging to a big tech corp that doesn't pony up.

      • Aurornis a month ago

        The big companies have their own NTP pools and even implementations.

        You can use the public Google or AWS pools if you want. Note that they have their own software, too, so be sure you understand the differences like leap smearing.

        Blocking FAANG IPs from the NTP Foundation’s pools wouldn’t hurt FAANG at all. It would only hurt people who weren’t aware and used the NTP Foundation’s pool for things.

      • ralferoo a month ago

        Not really. The biggest drain on resources historically has come from things like routers that have fixed NTP servers hardcoded in the firmware and every customer ends up using just that one without even knowing they're contributing to the problem. They also can't be blocked as the requests could come from anywhere.

    • aembleton a month ago

      Itchy and Scratchy

  • philipwhiuk a month ago

    Why is research into the protocol useful. Isn't it done?

    • iamkonstantin a month ago

      We keep coming up with new ways to use it: https://ntrs.nasa.gov/citations/20240011919

      • freeopinion a month ago

        It's telling that we can appropriate millions of dollars to transport a decommissioned shuttle from a museum in Virginia to Texas, but NASA can't pitch in the cost of one tank of diesel to the people maintaining what this article claims to be a mission-critical tool?

    • junon a month ago

      Time is hard, time synchronization is arguably harder.

    • saikia81 a month ago

      The project isn't about research it's about creating a reference implementation

      • philipwhiuk a month ago

        > The NTP Project conducts Research and Development in NTP, a protocol designed to synchronize the clocks of computers over a network to a common timebase.

        Research is put front and centre in their pitch for funding.

        • ptero a month ago

          This is probably research into protocol for time sync. Which works well for some scenarios, but not yet for others and can improve the reference implementation (I guess; I have no hard knowledge there).

          And given that ntp.org runs servers that so many organizations use they should be near the top of the funding queue for any NTP research. My 2c.

      • willis936 a month ago

        What's the distinction from NIST's internet time service?

    • jrmg a month ago

      Don’t think you deserve these downvotes. That was my reaction too. Perhaps they’re coming from people who believe that the money is to support running of time servers (which, to be fair, “Please donate to keep the Network Time Protocol up” certainly implies…)

      I too would be interested in knowing what the Network Time Foundation is researching, and I think conversation about that is appropriate here. NTP certainly _seems_ like it’s been ‘good enough’ for decades to an uninformed observer, and discussing if and why it’s not would be interesting (and perhaps motivate donations!)

  • arccy a month ago

    It's not really clear why they need this money either?

    • simoncion a month ago

      > It's not really clear why they need this money either?

      Really? The sentence at the top of the Donate page seems pretty clear to me:

      > Your donation helps Network Time Foundation maintain the NTP website and provide resources and support to NTP developers.

      Is it unclear to you?

      • tdeck a month ago

        It is kind of vague IMO. Especially since most of the actual NTP infrastructure is run by governments, universities, and companies.

        https://gist.github.com/mutin-sa/eea1c396b1e610a2da1e5550d94...

        But..it's $1k. This is basically pocket change on an institutional level. I've been part of some very scrappy and poorly funded community organizations and even they took in more than $1k every year. Even if you don't believe NTP maintainers should be paid anything for their work (an opinion I don't hold), it's trivial to spend this amount on modest everyday expenses like renting a venue a couple of times, buying insurance, and paying for hosting and technical resources.

        EDIT: Here is their 2024 tax return

        https://www.nwtime.org/about/documents/2024_NTF_IRS_990.pdf

        It looks like they took in more than $200k and spent $100k on "contract services" (I can't tell what that means) and somewhat modest amounts on other things. Unfortunately I need to exit the rabbit hole now.

        • bawolff a month ago

          We're talking about $1000. In context i would assume its their hosting bill.

          I can't imagine its much more than that if we are talking about such a small sum.

        • simoncion a month ago

          > It is kind of vague IMO.

          How much more clear can they reasonably be?

          It seems a big waste of effort to maintain -say- a damnable Trello board with upcoming priorities and roadmaps <strike>and Kickstarter stretch goals</strike> when their bug tracker and mailing list are visible to the public. (Though, it seems that they've recently put the list behind some broken moderation software, so you have to go to -say- the IETF's archive of the thing to read it. "AI" crawlers ruin everything.)

          EDIT: Do note that that tax return you found is for the Network Time Foundation, not the NTP Project. I don't know if the two are separate entities for tax purposes, but do note that the NTF supports several projects, of which the NTP Project is one. The NTP Project is just for NTP.

      • GuB-42 a month ago

        It doesn't explain why they need the money "we need the money to continue doing what we are doing" means nothing unless they also explain what they are doing and why it matters.

        Thankfully, that's also on the front page:

        What they are doing:

        > The NTP Project produces an open source Reference Implementation of the NTP standard, maintains the implementation Documentation, and develops the protocol and algorithmic standard that is used to communicate time between systems

        And why it matters:

        > NTP is what ensures the reliability of billions of devices around the world, under the sea, and even in space

        Now, it doesn't explain why a reference implementation is a good thing, but I think that at this point, you have a good enough idea to decide if you want to donate or not.

        Edit: However, $1000 seems too low to matter. It may not even pay for the expense of the fundraising itself. I think it is more of an awareness campaign: "look at the protocol we all use, you would think we are talking many millions of dollars, but the truth is, you are off by orders of magnitude"

      • arccy a month ago

        a website doesn't need $1000

        and $1000 seems at the same time to be quite a bit of money, but also too little to be for funding people long term.

imglorp a month ago

The project has been hungry for years.

There was a fork to clean up and secure the implementation: https://ntpsec.org and ideally they would combine forces.

Summarized here: https://lwn.net/Articles/713901

  • tptacek a month ago

    Yeah the ntpsec story, not great. I don't believe they're taken especially seriously. There are people close to Harlan Stenn who believe the project is essentially fraudulent.

    • chocalot a month ago

      An ntpd-rs contributor elsewhere in the thread suggests ntpsec is used by many distributions, and suggests donating to ntpsec (amongst some other organisations).

      https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=45900184

      • akerl_ a month ago

        Every distribution I've seen is using chrony or systemd-timesyncd. Is there a distribution that's actually using ntpsec?

    • BigTTYGothGF a month ago

      > the project is essentially fraudulent

      Even if it's not, ESR is involved so it's not serious.

      • imglorp a month ago

        So, I understand first hand ESR might be a little, uh, eccentric, when dealing with humans.

        But it seems that his nerding, taken by itself, is pretty solid. Is that not the case?

        • acdha a month ago

          It’s fairly limited: taking over maintenance for popmail or forking NTPSec certainly isn’t nothing but his reputation is built on the Cathedral and Bazaar essay getting attention at the right time in the 90s when open source was really taking off and his subsequent OSI work. I’d wager that an order of magnitude more people heard about fetchmail from his writing rather than the other way around.

          That’s not to say that his open source projects aren’t useful, only that there are thousands of other developers who’ve done work of similar scale and adoption.

        • BigTTYGothGF a month ago

          > Is that not the case?

          Not really, see forex the reposurgeon nonsense. https://www.phoronix.com/news/GCC-Git-Not-Yet-Settled

        • tptacek a month ago

          No, I don't think it is.

jchw a month ago

I tried to donate, but apparently I am not human:

> 1 error prohibited this submission from being saved:

> Looks like you are not a human

Good to know.

  • autoexec a month ago

    I'm not sure why they'd try so hard to keep bots from paying them anyway. If someone wants to write a bot that constantly pays me good money I'm fine with that. I might rate limit it if the stream of payments coming in can't cover the cost of keeping the server from being DoS'd, but that's not going to inconvenience a human trying to submit a payment one time.

    • slv77 a month ago

      Bots use sites like this to validate lists of stolen cards with low dollar donations to validate the cards before using them on the target site. Without some one of protection sites like these are quickly flooded with fraudulent transactions and then fined and shut down by Visa and Mastercard.

      • lapsis_beeftech a month ago

        This sounds like a problem where cryptocurrency could actually be the solution. Next time I want to make a charitable donation I will ask for an XMR address to preserve my privacy and work around commercial payment processor issues.

        • lez a month ago

          I was thinking the same. Seems HN is now pro-bank and anti-cryptocurrency.

          • FabHK a month ago

            HN is anti-nonsense, anti-hype, anti-crime, so, yeah, pretty anti-cryptocurrency.

            • dlahoda a month ago

              until one's society started to collapse, one does not think crypto is good

              • mynameisash a month ago

                When society collapses, will we still have reliable infrastructure (internet and electricity, to be specific) on which cryptocurrency depends?

                • dlahoda a month ago

                  another one from high trust stable place. glad for you being there.

                  have you heard about decentralization?

                  society is not civilization. local vs global.

                  • mynameisash a month ago

                    > society is not civilization. local vs global.

                    I agree, and I am still pointing to the collapse of society, not civilization. My infrastructure is local. If local society collapses, what reason do people have to maintain transmission and distribution lines and electrical substations, to work at power plants, to maintain fiber optic or copper lines for internet connectivity?

                    Even if "the internet" as a whole is still around, the inability for someone to connect to and to use it means cryptocurrency is similarly useless.

    • JimDabell a month ago

      If you have small payments that can be made by bots easily, then your service can be used by thieves as an oracle to determine which of their stolen credit card numbers still work. Then you get lots of chargebacks to deal with.

    • op7 a month ago

      Then when too many of the fradulent payments get charged back then your payment processor drops you

      • michaelt a month ago

        Sure, chargebacks cost money.

        You know what else costs money? When someone wants to give you money, and you misidentify them as a bot and refuse their money.

        • Akronymus a month ago

          With donations being blocked you keep sitting at 0, with chargebacks you can actually go negative, in a potentially unbounded way.

          • zinekeller a month ago

            I really hope that the sole reason that michaelt concluded this is simply due on not having any experience how to manage credit card payments (on merchant's side).

            For those who does not handle these things: I am not sure on what processor Network Time Foundation is using, but Stripe's $15 fee is actually on the low side of chargebacks (some processors even use the fixed fee + percentage model). Worse, this is unconditional: if you somehow won this, you won't get the chargeback fee.

        • bawolff a month ago

          Yeah, but one probably costs more money then the other, and it seems plausible its the chargebacks.

    • jacquesm a month ago

      That's because the bots will use such services to 'taste' cards to see if they work. Then if they do the criminals can resell them for a higher value than for which they bought them for.

    • bmacho a month ago

      [deleted]

      • dietr1ch a month ago

        Well fraudsters need to have their time in sync for their business right? Who are you to deny their donations?

      • mjhay a month ago

        Is there a problem with fraudsters donating to OSS projects?

      • johnisgood a month ago

        Money is money.

        How do you know the cash you are using is not "blood money"? Come on.

  • landgenoot a month ago

    You are thinking to much in emoji's and emdashes.

  • fghorow a month ago

    Yeah, I'm not a human either.

    (Edited to add: that was from Safari. Chrome worked. YMMV.)

  • zimpenfish a month ago

    Same - first time the requirement for first name + last name bounced me, the next two times reCAPTCHA bounced me. Gave up then.

  • zelphirkalt a month ago

    I had similar trouble, back when I tried to donate to the Internet archive. Donation box would simply not let me donate. I even wrote them an e-mail and nothing changed half a year later, so I gave up.

    Too bad that good projects mess their donations up by doing web BS.

tomashubelbauer a month ago

I wish when accepting donations, websites would stop caching the total collected amount or give it a super short TTL. I like to see the little progress bar get closer to the goal thanks to my couple of bucks.

  • dspillett a month ago

    If they are only counting fully cleared funds, your payment might not be relevant yet. Some fraud checks are not synchronous, for instance.

    Though they could fake it: take the current cleared total and add your amount for your display.

  • pigbearpig a month ago

    Perhaps they don't have the funds to implement that feature.

stego-tech a month ago

Absolutely shameful that this project - and many, many others that underpin trillion-dollar tech company valuations - aren’t fully funded already by the major consumers.

I’d like to see more projects do a breakdown of total yearly costs (including contributor compensation!), how much existing sponsorships from companies actually cover, and what number they’d need to operate properly (with full-time, paid contributors).

  • g-mork a month ago

    I'm not so sure, becoming dependent on corporate funding means importing corporate policy. Is it really necessary for a DEI policy being required to appear on ntp.org, or perhaps the sudden advocacy of some proprietary protocol crapware pushed into public use from out of nowhere? That's pretty much what tends to happen

    Of course the same thing happens in reverse (see recent python.org refusal to accept federal funding)

    • stego-tech a month ago

      Not gonna lie, you had me going in the first sentence and then betrayed your position with:

      > Is it really necessary for a DEI policy being required to appear…?

      So ignoring the, well, ignorance of the remainder of your statement, it’s worth pointing out that these entities already publish mission statements, community/contributor guidelines, and a raft of other documentation that governs how they intend to operate as a way of greasing the wheels of operations. Policies are the norm, not the exception, because they dictate the rules of engagement.

      So yeah, I’m all for groups making clear what they do and do not find acceptable. Transparency is a good thing, be it in code (open source), accounting, policy, or governance. And if more groups opened up their books and laid bare their operations, it’d be easier to tie their outcomes to industrial and governmental bad actors (like AWS, Google, Microsoft, Apple, etc) that fail to substantially support these technologies, or demand favors or policy changes in exchange for basic funding.

      Ideally? Orgs that use open source tech in their products ought to chip in a fixed percentage to ongoing support of that project. If an entity like AWS chipped in, say, 0.01% of revenue from every service that used NTP, then the NTP organization almost certainly wouldn’t require additional funding.

      • g-mork a month ago

        Did I trigger you by picking DEI as an example? You can find a million alternatives from e.g. the Firefox<->Google relationship. No need to start name calling or whatnot

sathackr a month ago

That seems very low for such a high profile site/project

I donated an amount but the bar didn't move and is at the same level($395) as before my donation

  • sathackr a month ago

    If you follow the "Foundations work" link at the bottom, you're taken to another page that shows $4,675 of $11,000 November goal.

    • sathackr a month ago

      Looks like the first $1000 goal is specifically for maintaining to he NTP website and maybe developers? While the other is a broader goal for the foundation

  • Velocifyer a month ago

    The bar is still at $395. I am suspicious.

    • khernandezrt a month ago

      I think someone is manually updating the site to whatever the current donation amount is.

juliusceasar a month ago

I refuse to donate. Trillion dollar companies depend leech on it and yet refuse to spend money on it.

Let it fail and see what happens.

  • Aurornis a month ago

    Those trillion dollar companies are running a lot of public NTP server infrastructure. Here is a list of public NTP addresses from different big tech companies: https://gist.github.com/mutin-sa/eea1c396b1e610a2da1e5550d94...

    > Trillion dollar companies depend leech on it

    Are you confusing the NTP Foundation (the group asking for donations) with NTP the protocol or the NTP software itself?

    This donation request isn’t even for the public NTP pool. Read the donation page carefully.

    The big companies you’re angry at are neither dependent upon nor leeching from this group. They run their own NTP infrastructure, which in some cases has their own developments and adjustments.

    Google’s, for example, uses time-smearing to handle leaps. This is different than the standard and therefore you shouldn’t mix Google’s leap-smearing NTP system with NTP servers that don’t leap smear.

    > Let it fail and see what happens.

    This is a real “cut off your nose to spite your face” moment, but worse: Those public companies don’t depend on any of this. They provide their own server pools and in some cases develop their own software with their own advancements. Cheering for the NTP Foundation to fail because you think it will hurt big companies is very uninformed.

    • gsich a month ago

      leap seconds are deprecated

      • Analemma_ a month ago

        The deprecation isn't effective until 2035, leap seconds will still be inserted until then.

    • righthand a month ago

      It would hurt the big companies though because the employees of those big companies rely on Ntp. It may not directly impact them but it’s better than letting them continue to rake in billions and then never support the core foundational tech.

      Maybe letting Ntp fail will wake up some of the employees of other companies to the absolute sad state of the software world.

      • Aurornis a month ago

        > Maybe letting Ntp fail will wake up some of the employees of other companies to the absolute sad state of the software world.

        Big companies run their own NTP servers (which you can use for free) and do not use the reference implantation.

        There is nothing to “fail” in this project which would cause big companies to have infrastructure problems.

        The saddest state of the software world is that some people here have convinced themselves to cheer for this project to fail because they don’t understand that big companies do not depend on this project that is asking for donations.

        • righthand a month ago

          From the previous comment.

          > Google’s, for example, uses time-smearing to handle leaps. This is different than the standard and therefore you shouldn’t mix Google’s leap-smearing NTP system with NTP servers that don’t leap smear.

          So we can use or not?

          If we can then well good, then there will be no problem then if the funding fails.

          • Aurornis a month ago

            > If we can then well good, then there will be no problem then if the funding fails

            The funding is not for the NTP servers or pools. Please read the actual page and all of the comments trying to explain that the HN title is a lie. NTP will not “go down” if this project fails.

            You can use Google or Amazon’s NTP servers if you’d like. Just be aware of how they represent leap seconds differently.

            • righthand a month ago

              You’re just validating my reasons to not donate which is what this discussion is about. It’s not about the way Ntp specifically works or what the money will go to. My reasons for not donating are that bad acting corpos have destroyed any reason or trust to support these smaller outfits whether directly impactful or not.

  • sph a month ago

    Harsh but true. Any of the FAANGs could cough up a million dollars and let the thing run for 1000 months.

    I’m too poor to have too much revenue that I need to donate some away to pay fewer taxes. That’s a problem corporations have.

    • jahnu a month ago

      Even a single highly paid employee of a FAANG, many of whom frequent this very forum, could pay for a year without breaking the bank.

      • codingdave a month ago

        100% true, but they shouldn't have to. If FAANG is using it, they should fund it. I don't want to work in a culture where the employees pay for the corporations' tools.

        • sph a month ago

          > I don't want to work in a culture where the employees pay for the corporations' tools.

          Agreed. They call that 'open source' work (derogative)

        • jahnu a month ago

          I totally agree. I wasn't explicit enough I just wanted to point out the absurdity of the major corps not bothering to just automatically fund these things. I.e. it being such a small amount compared to salaries which presumably are low enough to maintain large profits.

        • reactordev a month ago

          Say this louder for the managers in the back!

          I’m sick of having to pay for my own tools to do my job at your company. Either find a way to build using free tools or fork up the license for that Visual Studio Ultimate or IntelliJ Idea Ultimate license. Pay for your database vendor. Your corporate IdP. Why not $300/yr for a high value output employee?

          • ebiester a month ago

            We have a price for the total infrastructure spend per dev, and that includes things like AWS prices and all of the tooling like jira and github.

            But you absolutely shouldn't have to pay for your own tools. (That said, blue collar people often have to, unlike us, and that's also awful.) But also, it's their productivity. If you are all laboring under the same constraints, it's their choice to make if they care about your productivity.

          • waltbosz a month ago

            You know, I always thought it odd when plumbers (etc. tradesmen) working full time for a company have to supply their own tools.

            • reactordev a month ago

              My brother is a plumber and his company reimbursed him for every tool he has bought for the job. After 5 years, he started his own plumbing business and he supplies all the tools, trucks, benefits, contracts, and customer support for his employees in the field. For what it’s worth.

              You can choose your tool, you’ll get it.

              • mschuster91 a month ago

                > You can choose your tool, you’ll get it.

                That's actually decent. Too often you're stuck with whatever gear your shop uses - Bosch, Hilti, Makita are the most common power tools here in Germany. It makes sense for the penny pinchers who purchase on volume and get discounts, but chances are high it ends up pissing off the employees rather sooner than later.

            • johnisgood a month ago

              Yeah, sure, but in many places (for example in my country) they do not work for a company. They are not even legally working for themselves. You call them, they do the job, then ask for money. That's it. I think this is illegal though, but happens a lot when it comes to anything handyman-ish.

            • hrimfaxi a month ago

              I always found it odd that so many shops let people use whichever tools they want!

        • calvinmorrison a month ago

          soon enough you'll start charging people for source code and distribution.

          Maybe building the world on open source software was not good idea

      • throwaway838112 a month ago

        They would rather downvote you than giving away $100

    • graemep a month ago

      It also gives them power over how things are run. He who pays the piper calls the tune.

  • hosteur a month ago

    > Let it fail and see what happens.

    It will get replaced by a proprietary protocol/paid service from each Azure, Cloudflare, Google, AWS, ...

    The rest of us will be S.O.L.

    • Aurornis a month ago

      FYI the big companies provide their own NTP servers and pools. You can use them if you’d like.

      They also don’t use the reference implementation (which is maintained by the group this donation is for). Your distros and software probably doesn’t use it either.

      The commenter above who thinks shutting down the NTP Foundation will hurt FAANG because they “leech” off of NTP Foundation is completely uninformed.

    • everforward a month ago

      This seems incredibly unlikely. They all want clients to have accurate time, because it underpins things like sessions and TLS certs. It would also almost certainly be trivial to proxy back to regular NTP.

      Even if the NTP pool somehow died, all it takes to make your own Stratum 1 NTP service is a GPS chip. An old phone probably makes a great small-scale NTP server, or an ESP32 with a GPS chip attached. 20 years ago it would have required exotic parts, but they're mundane, cheap and omnipresent these days.

    • qwertytyyuu a month ago

      It would be so much cheaper for the companies to support this than out their own solution

      • foofoo12 a month ago

        You're missing the bigger picture. Vendor lock in.

        • throwaway838112 a month ago

          Not only that, but the owners of big companies are actively lobbying to pay even less taxes. They are ideologically opposed to supporting public benefit projects.

      • gjvc a month ago

        but then they wouldn't own it.

  • jillesvangurp a month ago

    This raises a lot of questions. Did they actually ask for money to these big companies? Did they get rejected?

    Another approach could be to move this under the umbrella of any of the other OSS foundations. I can imagine the Linux Foundation would be a good place. Well funded, already has most of the stakeholders involved, and this clearly falls in their scope of interest at least. It would not surprise me if that wasn't discussed at some point.

    This smells a bit like something that might be more complicated than it looks.

    • emsign a month ago

      I'd happily donate to NTP if and only if AI companies are barred from using free software like this in the future via the sw license. I don't WANT to be part of this internet that's hostile and exploitative towards users anymore.

      • johnisgood a month ago

        I think we ought to buckle up because it only seems to be getting worse, quickly.

  • jvanderbot a month ago

    Ideologically pure, but for all practical purposes miserly. Trillion dollar companies are very hard to move that way and very unlikely to take the first step. We need a "Foundational Software and Services" fund that says very nice things about each donor and spends 100$ on publicity for every 1$ to software to even get them to start looking, I bet.

    Donate some time: Ask your boss if their company could chip?

  • kristopolous a month ago

    Is there any endowment for such projects?

    Something like money to the endowment from the big corp, then would be recipients petition the endowment for ongoing funding, some board decides based on a set of open protocols...

    Because honestly I've seen this a bit recently - major infrastructure projects looking for effectively pocket change; a couple thousand.

    They shouldn't ever have to beg for money, this is stupid.

    • trollbridge a month ago

      Wikimedia Foundation sort of does now. The result of that is that their spending has ballooned to hundreds of millions of dollars.

  • Barbing a month ago

    Anyone know whether NTP already asks the biggest names for donations?

  • jmclnx a month ago

    I agree with you in this, I donate to a few Open Source Projects, I really cannot afford to donate to one that multi-billon $ companies use for free.

    For example, OpenSSH. Used everywhere yet IBM gives a big fat 0 to that project even though OpenSSH is even used in AIX. Even though I love to complain about Microsoft, M/S does donate a decent amount to OpenSSH via OpenBSD, so M/S gets my respect for doing that.

    Time companies like IBM steps up and give, if not, we are back to playing with CMOS date/time. Which is how things were when I started programing at a large company decades ago.

  • neuroelectron a month ago

    Trillion dollar companies run their own NTP servers

  • foofoo12 a month ago

    They'd each fork it. AWS NTP for $0.01/request.

  • throwaway838112 a month ago

    Doing that punishes people who donated.

  • alex_duf a month ago

    but do you want it to be dependent on trillion dollar companies?

    • vel0city a month ago

      You don't need to be dependent on trillion dollar time companies to get an extremely accurate time source. Just get your own GPS receiver that supports timing output. You can get an GPS-based NTP server for pretty cheap.

      • ryandrake a month ago

        I've had an inexpensive GPS antenna "puck" on my roof attached to a 2nd or 3rd gen raspberry pi inside, providing accurate time to my home for over a decade. This is a sub-$100 project and very fun.

  • jrm4 a month ago

    Wow. I mean, I imagine that this would be a hard thing for trillion dollar companies to somehow enshittify;

    and still, I'd never put it past them to figure out something that I haven't.

    I reflexively donate a little to things like this and I think everyone else should to.

  • baq a month ago

    they'll buy leftovers and take the thing private.

clbrmbr a month ago

The folks who run the public NTP pool really ought not to make it easier to pay them money to use it commercially.

I submitted a request for commercial use via their online form but never received a response.

  • homebrewer a month ago

    It's mostly run by one guy with very limited time. On their forum, I've seen one vendor repeatedly asking for the vendor prefix for three years, only getting the response once, and never actually receiving the prefix.

rnijveld a month ago

As someone working on an NTP implementation (specifically ntpd-rs) I have to add some context to this: I do believe that donating to the Network Time Foundation is fine, but it is not required to keep the Network Time Protocol up in any way.

Firstly, the most important reason the ntp.org domain name is so well known is because of the NTP pool, which is an entirely separate project (the Network Time Foundation calls it an associated project), which was allowed to use the `pool.ntp.org` domain name, but does not directly receive significant funding from the Network Time Foundation as far as I understand (I do not know the details of the domain name arrangement). That pool project was developed independently of the Network Time Foundation and is run by a different group of volunteers, mostly being developed and maintained by Ask Bjørn Hansen and hosting servers entirely consisting of (sometimes professional) volunteer operators. This is what many NTP implementations, specifically many Linux distributions, use as their standard source of time. But it does not appear to depend much on the Network Time Foundation for continued existence.

Secondly, despite all the claims made on the Network Time Foundation site, the IETF took over development and maintenance of the NTP protocol for something like two decades now already under the NTP working group. This was all done with the Network Time Foundation fully agreeing this was the way forward. But for some reason they still consider themselves exempted from any process that the IETF uses and consider themselves as the true developers of the protocol. They constantly frustrate the processes that the IETF uses, claiming that they should receive special treatment as being the 'reference implementation'. Meanwhile, the IETF NTP WG does not have a concept of the reference implementation at all, instead considering all NTP implementations equal.

Aside from this frustrating stance, the Network Time Foundation also didn't do much work on trying to forward the standard at all, instead relying on the status quo from the late 90s and early 2000s. Meanwhile the IETF NTP WG worked on standardizing a way to secure NTP traffic (with regular NTP traffic being relatively easy to man in the middle, with older implementations even being so predictable that faking responses didn't even need reading the requests). That much more secure standard, NTS, was fully standardized in September of 2020, but the Network Time Foundation continues to not implement this standard. All of this has resulted in almost every Linux distribution that I know of replacing their ntpd implementation with NTPsec (with ntpd not even being available as an alternative anymore for installation).

Meanwhile people also started working on NTPv5, in order to remove some of the unsafe and badly defined parts of the standard, and in general bring the spec back up to date. As part of this process, it was decided some time ago that in contrast to the previous NTP standards, the algorithms specifying what a client should do in order to synchronize the time should be removed from the standard (the algorithms specified in the previous standards were not being used by any implementation, not even the ntpd implementation by the Network Time Foundation itself). NTPv5 instead focuses on the wire format of NTP packets and the simple interactions between parties. Yet despite there having been a consensus call on this, and despite no current implementation following the exact algorithm as specified in NTPv4, the Network Time Foundation continues to frustrate the process by claiming that these algorithms are an essential part of the standard.

All of this frustration was also a large part of why the PTP protocol was eventually developed at the IEEE. That is to say: even though the operating mode of PTP is often quite different to that of NTP these days, the information that needs to be transferred is essentially the same, and the packets could have trivially been defined to be the same as long as NTP had built in a little bit of additional flexibility a little bit earlier. This would have also helped NTP in the end (with for example hardware timestamping only being implemented for PTP right now, even though it could have been just as useful in NTP), and with PTP now also aiming to introduce a simpler client-server model via CSPTP that looks a whole lot like what NTP was trying to achieve all this time with its most used operating mode.

It is my belief that the Network Time Foundation continues to push themselves in a corner of more and more irrelevance even though that did not need to be. The historical significance of David Mills' ntpd implementation is definitely there, and we should applaud the initial efforts and their focus on keeping the protocol open and widely available. And I do believe that the current people at the Network Time Foundation could still provide more than enough valuable input in the standardization process, but they cannot claim anymore to be the sole developers of the NTP protocol. Times have changed, there are now multiple implementations with an equally valid claim. Especially with GNSS (specifically GPS) being under attack more and more these days, we need alternative ways of synchronizing computer clocks to a standard time in a secure way. NTP and NTS are perfectly positioned to take on that task and we need to make sure that we keep the standard up to date for our evolving world.

Edit: if you want something else to donate to, I would consider donating to the IETF, NTPsec, or maybe donating some time to the NTP pool. I would also link to donations for Chrony (one of the other major NTP server implementations) but they do not appear to offer anything. Linking to my own project's donation page does not seem fair considering the contents of this post.

47282847 a month ago

Confusing. On https://www.nwtime.org/ they use $11,000 as “November 2025 goal“, with $4,675 as current level?

Are these goals monthly goals, with the counter being reset? The sites don’t make that clear.

Theodores a month ago

So we have NTP begging to raise a grand yet we have hundreds of billions being spent on AI data centers.

NTP might not be able to generate AI cat videos full of hallucinations but it is a vital part of web infrastructure. The same can't be said about today's mega projects.

bheadmaster a month ago

It's sad that a project that literally every company in the world depends on is requiring donations to keep working.

  • jeffbee a month ago

    It is apparently "Grossly Overestimate The Reliance of Companies on Open Software and Systems Week" and nobody told me.

    • bheadmaster a month ago

      Name one company that doesn't depend on NTP.

      • Aurornis a month ago

        This donation is for the NTP Foundation for something specific like their website.

        The big companies who use NTP have their own pools and either use versions of different ntp implantations or their own internal ones.

        All of these comments assuming cloud providers are using the reference NTP implementation and the public pools have no idea what they’re talking about.

      • jeffbee a month ago

        Perhaps it is just my career experience, but I have never worked at a company that 1) cared about the time and 2) did not have its own clocks and 3) would touch ntpd with a 10-foot pole.

  • NetMageSCW a month ago

    It is sad that an unfounded comment like that can be posted so easily with no basis in fact.

    • bheadmaster a month ago

      Care to elaborate, or do you prefer to just say "nah fam thats cap" in a pretentious manner?

      • rvz a month ago

        These large trillion dollar companies run their own NTP servers rather than depending on this one.

  • mapt a month ago

    I feel like a ~$10M/yr foundation to fund hundreds of the "Some Guy In Nebraska" people (https://xkcd.com/2347/) on a modest stipend would be easily worthwhile for any one of the tech giants, even understanding the free rider effect. Some of their thousands of engineers are being paid high six or seven figures, and every single minute of their time spent figuring out how some dependency has changed and broken compatibility adds up very quickly. Just paying them to sit on their hands and not let anything break by some kind of hostile takeover, like an intelligence agency quietly paying people to keep quiet.

calibas a month ago

Some of the comments here seem overly negative and critical.

They support billions of devices and are only asking for $4,000 in donations per year.

  • calibas a month ago

    Never mind, they keep upping the max every time they reach it. Now it's an $11,000 goal...

  • NetMageSCW a month ago

    They support no devices. Read more carefully.

    • calibas a month ago

      It's almost certain NTP is what's synchronizing time on your system right now.

      And yes, they're separate from the NTP Pool Project, which runs the actual servers, but the Network Time Foundation supports the software that billions of devices run on.

marginalx a month ago

The domain ntp.org is a very visible one, why not add a "Donors" page and say everyone who donates 250+ gets to show their company name as a sponsor on that page? This usually gets the attention of corporates and makes it easy to make the case internally as well, they all love to sponsor!

knadh a month ago

We've allocated $60,000 to NTP from FLOSS/fund [1]. It happened in May, but the disbursal is pending owing to paperwork [2]. We hope it'll go through in the next couple of months.

[1] https://floss.fund/projects/2025/

[2] https://floss.fund/blog/second-tranche-2025-anniversary/#wha...

  • VoidWhisperer a month ago

    The combination of the moving goalposts for donations (they changed it from $1000 goal to $4000 after hitting their goal[0]) and the fact that they have have a large donation like this pending but simply haven't completed the paperwork kind of rubs me the wrong way a little bit.

    [0]: https://web.archive.org/web/20251112110436/https://www.ntp.o...

    • knadh a month ago

      The delay is on our side while we wait for regulatory approvals (India) for cross-border disbursements, I must clarify. The issues are described in the post I linked [2].

seb1204 a month ago

Why not just turn it off and say we need money to turn it in again?

  • onion2k a month ago

    That might work, but the second order effect would probably be companies trying to do the work of time synchronisation themselves in case it happened again. That would lead to fragmentation and incompatibility.

    • Aurornis a month ago

      The cloud providers already use their own NTP infrastructure. Much of it is public and you can use it for free, too.

  • ramon156 a month ago

    Turn what off?

    • bilekas a month ago

      Time itself maybe, I know I could use with a little bit of a pause.

      • rswail a month ago

        I really enjoyed the first part (say 2-3 weeks) of COVID lockdowns, we had the longest in the world here and it got pretty old by the end of it, but the first few weeks, no traffic, no noise, quiet city.

        It was like a vacation for our heads.

        Not sure how, but a yearly "lockdown vacation" would be a Good Thing for our cities (IMNSHO).

      • baq a month ago

        Return to the basement now. No escape.

    • theblazehen a month ago

      pool.ntp.org dns resolution and any servers that they control, presumably

      • rnijveld a month ago

        The ntp pool is actually independently run and funded and has nothing to do with the NTPd implementation nor the NTP Foundation, other than them allowing the pool to use that DNS name.

cpburns2009 a month ago

The GitHub sponsors page provides slightly more information than ntp.org and nwtime.org.

https://github.com/sponsors/nwtime

Velocifyer a month ago

Most NTP users use better implementations that NTPd (like chrony)

gnarlouse a month ago

I’m confused—why such a small donation amount?

righthand a month ago

Honestly the XSLT mocking and bad faith arguments have convinced me as an individual I shouldn’t care about technologies so much. If NTP is so important, one of the billion dollar corpos can foot the bill since they know best about what is valuable.

jcalvinowens a month ago

Meh. NTP is just an awkward less accurate frontend for GPS these days.

It's so easy to run your own NTP server. You can set up a pretty decent one using GPS PPS for like $200. My home ntp server is good for +/- 1us if you believe its ntpq stats...

This isn't like DNS. Everyone can run their own local NTP and that's fine. The only true shared infrastructure is the GPS constellation.

almosthere a month ago

it must be fake if it wanted 1k and now 4k. dont donate

1970-01-01 a month ago

I hate to say it, but a number that low means ads are the answer. Even a YouTube video showing how to set up NTP would cover this cost if you recommend it to all users. Asking for money isn't respectable at this low number.

emsign a month ago

$1 Trillion for AI but we the people have to keep this foundation of the internet running. This is all one big shit show.

NoSalt a month ago

Ok Musk, Bezos, Gates, etc. ... reach into those deeeeeeeep pockets of yours and fund something that I KNOW you use.

dependency_2x a month ago

https://imgs.xkcd.com/comics/dependency_2x.png

  • lifestyleguru a month ago

    There are always money and resources in ad tech.

  • NetMageSCW a month ago

    Except these are some (almost scammers) claiming to be a vital pillar but just pointing at the vital piece and saying they help with it.

jacquesm a month ago

They should just switch it off for a day or two, I don't think they'll have trouble getting funding after that.

iberator a month ago

PTP is way better than NTP, but it might be possible that reference time is somehow taken from NTP anyway.

What I Mean:

Reference .gov atomic clock (not radium one) -> NTP -> ? -> ? -> satellite control station -> gps -> PTP

Hahaha

  • jhellan a month ago

    This is true when all network delays between the synchronized device and the time reference are deterministic and accounted for in the configuration. The design of PTP assumes that this is the case. NTP, on the other hand, estimates the network delays to its time references.

    Is there any reason to believe that PTP would be better in normal networks?

  • great_wubwub a month ago

    PTP is more precise so it's much harder to synchronize over long distances. Even in data centers it benefits from hop-by-hop participation from the routers involved.

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