When the Documentation Dies
Bags.fm dashboard

When the Documentation Dies

Memecoin Royalties and the Crisis of Open Source Funding

The Breaking Point

On January 7, 2026, Adam Wathan wrote(rather spoke) that 75% of Tailwind Labs' engineering team had been laid off the day before.

The timing seemed absurd. Tailwind CSS had never been more popular—tens of millions of downloads on npm each month, taught in bootcamps worldwide, praised by developers as the utility-first framework that finally made CSS manageable. But Wathan's announcement revealed a brutal truth: revenue had collapsed by nearly 80%. "Tailwind is growing faster than it ever has and is bigger than it ever has been," he wrote, "and our revenue is down close to 80%."

The culprit wasn't a competitor. It was the same AI coding assistants that developers loved. ChatGPT, Claude, and GitHub Copilot now generated Tailwind code directly, and Wathan said Tailwind's documentation traffic had dropped about 40% since early 2023. Since the company's business model depended on developers discovering paid products—UI component libraries, templates, screencasts—while browsing those free docs, the entire revenue engine had seized.

When a community member submitted a pull request to make the documentation more AI-friendly through an /llms.txt file, Wathan closed it. "Making it easier for LLMs to read our docs just means less traffic to our docs which means less people learning about our paid products and the business being even less sustainable," he explained. He was caught in an impossible bind: the technology that made his framework indispensable was simultaneously destroying his ability to fund it.

Wathan's crisis was unusual only in its speed and visibility. The underlying problem—the profound difficulty of funding open source software that powers the modern internet—has been building for decades.


The Funding Gap That Won't Close

In 2016, researcher Nadia Eghbal published "Roads and Bridges: The Unseen Labor Behind Our Digital Infrastructure" for the Ford Foundation, documenting how critical open source projects—the software infrastructure that makes modern computing possible—are maintained by volunteers who do it "to build their reputations, out of a sense of obligation, or simply as a labor of love." The report became an instant classic, but the problems it identified have only intensified.

The consequences of underfunding aren't abstract. In 2014, the Heartbleed vulnerability exposed how OpenSSL—software securing a significant portion of internet traffic—was maintained by a tiny team of volunteers operating on minimal funding. In 2021, the Log4Shell vulnerability revealed that Log4j, downloaded billions of times, was sustained by unpaid maintainers experiencing burnout. In 2024, the xz-utils backdoor demonstrated how a malicious actor could exploit an overworked, burned-out maintainer to compromise critical infrastructure.

Perhaps most striking is the case of core-js, the JavaScript polyfill library downloaded over 9 billion times and used on more than half of the world's top 10,000 websites. Its maintainer, Denis Pushkarev, watched his monthly donations collapse from $2,500 to $400 despite the library's ubiquity. "Free open source software is fundamentally broken," he wrote in 2023, contemplating abandoning the project entirely.

Recent data confirms the systemic nature of this crisis: 60% of open source maintainers receive no payment for their work, 61% of unpaid maintainers work alone, and 60% have quit or seriously considered quitting due to burnout.

Consider what maintainers actually need. Not "funding" in the abstract—they need a way to keep building without becoming employees of their own projects. They need income that scales with impact but doesn't require grant applications, corporate negotiations, or equity dilution. They need support that arrives continuously, not in sporadic windfalls followed by anxious gaps.

The existing options fail this test systematically:

Corporate sponsorship comes with implicit expectations—feature requests, support obligations, influence over roadmaps. It works for projects that align with corporate interests; it abandons everything else.

Foundation grants require applications, reporting, and competition. They favor established projects with professional documentation over experimental work. They arrive late, if at all, and rarely cover the unglamorous maintenance that keeps software alive.

GitHub Sponsors and Patreon generate modest income for a fortunate few. The median open source maintainer earns essentially nothing through these channels. The platforms take cuts. The donations fluctuate unpredictably.

Venture capital demands growth, exits, and returns incompatible with public goods. It works for a narrow category of "open core" companies. For most maintainers, it's not even an option.

What's missing is a mechanism that converts community belief directly into creator income—continuously, without gatekeepers, scaled to actual engagement rather than grant committee preferences.


The Speculation Paradox

While open source maintainers struggled, an adjacent corner of the internet was moving billions of dollars daily through an entirely different mechanism: memecoin speculation.

In January 2024, Solana-based launchpad Pump.fun democratized token creation. Anyone could launch a coin in minutes—no code required—and watch it trade on bonding curves that created instant liquidity. By early 2025, third-party tracking put Pump.fun's cumulative fees in the hundreds of millions of dollars. Most tokens were jokes, pump-and-dump schemes, or celebrity cash-grabs that flamed out within hours.

The pattern was clear: speculation generates enormous capital flows, but the value rarely persists. Traders chase momentum. Creators launch tokens, take profits, and disappear. The infrastructure works beautifully; the incentives point nowhere useful.

But what if the incentives could be redirected?

Bags.fm introduced a modification to the memecoin launchpad formula: perpetual creator royalties. Tokens can be created and attributed to a creator's verified account, and the creator can claim a cut of trading activity via a linked wallet—continuously, not just at launch. Every trade, every speculation, every pump and dump sends a cut back to the creator.

The implications were profound. Suddenly, a creator's interests aligned with long-term trading activity rather than launch-day extraction. A project that maintained community interest—through continued development, engagement, or simple cultural relevance—would generate ongoing income. Speculation became patronage.

The platform called this model "creator-centric design." What it actually represented was something more fundamental: a mechanism for converting community belief into sustainable funding without requiring anything except trading activity.

The blockchain architecture makes this possible in ways traditional platforms cannot replicate. Smart contracts on Solana enforce royalty payments automatically—no payment processors, no platform intermediaries who can shut down accounts, no geographic restrictions. When a trade executes, the creator's percentage is programmatically guaranteed, settled in seconds, and accessible globally. A Russian developer like Pushkarev, cut off from Western payment systems, could receive royalties as easily as a Silicon Valley entrepreneur. The transparency is absolute: anyone can verify on-chain that royalties flow to the claimed creator wallet. And the permissionless nature means no approval process, no terms of service violations, no platform risk. A creator simply links a wallet and starts earning from trading activity—regardless of nationality, corporate affiliation, or whether any centralized authority approves of their work.

This isn't just a technical detail. It's why the model works where traditional crowdfunding platforms consistently fail to provide sustainable income for infrastructure maintainers.


Four Experiments in Vibe-Funded Development

By January 2026, Bags.fm's royalty model had attracted a particular kind of creator: developers building AI tools, experimental software, and open source projects who saw in memecoin speculation a potential escape from the funding trap that had captured Tailwind Labs and burned out countless maintainers like Denis Pushkarev.

Four projects emerged as early proof points, generating over $600,000 in combined earnings within their first two weeks of trading, tracked on the vibefunded dashboard, that, I vibecoded :).

Steve Yegge's Multi-Agent Orchestrator ($GAS)

Steve Yegge had spent decades inside Google and Amazon, becoming known in developer circles for influential blog posts that shaped how the industry thinks about software engineering. His latest project, Gastown, tackled a problem at the frontier of AI development: coordinating 20-30 specialized AI agents to solve complex tasks that no single agent could handle.

The technical challenge was substantial—orchestrating multiple AI models requires sophisticated routing, context management, and failure handling. But Yegge faced a more mundane problem: how to fund continued development without seeking venture capital or abandoning the project to evenings and weekends.

Then something unexpected happened. Shortly after Gastown's release, a token named $GAS appeared on Bags.fm without Yegge's involvement, attributed to his creator account; Yegge later described discovering unclaimed royalties and initially suspecting a scam.

Within two weeks, trading activity had generated over $303,000 in royalties. The market cap reached about $1.06 million with daily trading volume exceeding $3.8 million. Each trade, regardless of whether the trader profited or lost, sent a percentage back to Yegge. The speculation wasn't separate from the funding—it was the funding.

Geoffrey Huntley's Autonomous Coding Loops ($RALPH)

Geoffrey Huntley, a long-time open source contributor, described the "Ralph Wiggum Technique"—a deceptively simple approach to AI-assisted development. The core idea: create a bash loop that feeds AI outputs back as inputs, enabling autonomous coding cycles that iterate and improve without constant human intervention.

The technique was, in Huntley's words, "brilliant in stupidity." It challenged conventional software development paradigms by embracing the chaotic, emergent properties of AI generation rather than trying to control them. It enabled experimental work that no grant committee would fund and no corporate sponsor would understand.

The results defied expectations for "experimental" work: $202,022 in lifetime earnings, an $11.09 million market cap (the highest among the tracked projects), and daily volume approaching $2 million. The token provided funding for exactly the kind of unconventional research that traditional mechanisms systematically exclude.

Lex Christopherson's Automation Tool ($GSD)

Get Shit Done represented pure "vibe-coding" philosophy: rapid, AI-assisted development of practical automation tools without the overhead of traditional software engineering processes. Lex Christopherson (known as TÂCHES or glittercowboy on GitHub) built and shipped quickly, iterating based on community feedback rather than elaborate planning.

The $GSD token began trading just two days before this analysis. In that time, it generated $42,620 in royalties—demonstrating how quickly the memecoin funding model can validate (or reject) new work. The market cap reached $2.6 million with $2.87 million in daily volume.

The speed mattered. Traditional funding requires months of applications, reviews, and decisions. Memecoin royalties provided market feedback in hours.

Louis Grenard's Personal Assistant ($LEON)

LEON AI represented a different case: an established open source project with an existing user base that benefited from the memecoin funding model through community initiative. Louis Grenard (known as @grenlouis) wrote the first line of code for Leon AI in 2017 and has maintained the project—now with over 16,000 GitHub stars.

Like the others, the $LEON token was community-launched as a crowdfunding mechanism. Grenard did not create the token himself; fans deployed it to support his work. When he discovered and claimed it, he stated publicly that 100% of funds would go strictly to development time, API costs, and hardware for local inference testing. He cautioned buyers that this was speculative support, not an investment.

Within six days of the token's creation, Grenard had earned $54,152 in royalties. The market cap was more modest at $283,634, but the proof of concept was clear: even established projects could tap into speculative capital flows without the creator initiating anything.


The Flywheel in Motion

When $RALPH began trading, something unexpected happened. The volume drew attention from other AI researchers watching the funding model succeed. Within days, tokens appeared tied to other prominent developers—$GAS for Steve Yegge, $LEON for Louis Grenard—sometimes before the creators themselves publicly acknowledged them. Each new token brought its own audience; each audience discovered other projects.

This is the classic platform flywheel that business strategists describe in two-sided markets, but with a crucial modification. Traditional platform economics pit supply against demand—Uber needs drivers before it can attract riders, but drivers won't join without riders. Bags.fm solved this through its royalty mechanism: creators had strong incentives to attract traders to their specific tokens, which brought liquidity to the platform as a whole, which attracted more creators.

The cross-side network effects were particularly powerful. Trader activity directly subsidized creators through royalty fees. Successful projects like $RALPH and $GAS validated the model, reducing perceived risk for both new creators and new traders. Each success story became marketing for the next launch.

Compare this to Pump.fun's earlier model: without royalties, creators had no incentive for long-term engagement. Tokens launched, pumped, and died. Bags.fm's modification—simple in implementation, profound in effect—transformed the incentive structure entirely.

The numbers as of 19th January 2026 tell the story: Real time updates at https://vibefunded.xyz/

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Over $600,000 generated in under two weeks, with daily trading volume exceeding $9 million.


What the Platform Actually Built

Bags.fm's business model reveals the strategic choices that enabled this outcome.

The platform operates as a classic two-sided marketplace: creators (developers, researchers, artists) on the supply side; traders and speculators on the demand side. The value proposition differs for each:

For creators: Easy token deployment, perpetual royalty income, no equity dilution, no gatekeepers. The platform handles smart contracts, liquidity mechanics, and trading infrastructure. Creators focus on building.

For traders: Access to tokens tied to real projects with ongoing development, fair launch mechanics, and the speculative upside of early-stage bets. Unlike purely meme-driven tokens, these have fundamental activity to evaluate.

For the platform: Fees on trades (shared with creators), potential premium features, and the network effects of becoming the default destination for creator-driven launches.

The key resources are technical (bonding curve smart contracts, royalty distribution systems) and social (viral marketing channels on X/Twitter, community moderation, creator onboarding). Key partners include the broader Solana ecosystem—Raydium and Jupiter for liquidity integration—and the AI/developer communities that provide both creators and their audiences.

Revenue scales with trading volume rather than user counts, creating strong alignment between platform success and creator success. When creators build things that generate sustained trading interest, everyone profits.


The Job That Needed Doing

Return to the problem that opened this analysis. Adam Wathan needed a way to fund Tailwind's continued development when AI destroyed his documentation-based business model. Denis Pushkarev needed income that didn't vanish when geopolitical sanctions cut off payment processors. The maintainers of OpenSSL, Log4j, and xz-utils needed support before crisis struck, not after.

The memecoin royalty model doesn't solve every problem these maintainers face. It won't rebuild Wathan's documentation traffic or reverse sanctions on Russian developers. But it addresses the core job that traditional funding mechanisms fail: converting community belief into continuous creator income without intermediaries.

When the $GAS token emerged, Yegge wasn't applying for grants or negotiating with sponsors. A community that believed in his work had created a direct mechanism for supporting it—and he only had to claim it. Their speculation—whether driven by genuine support, profit motive, or simple gambling instinct—translated immediately into development funding.

The traders have their own job to be done: high-risk, high-reward plays aligned with creators they admire, where their activity directly supports real development rather than pure speculation. The $9.39 million in daily trading volume suggests this job resonates.

For creators who've watched their work generate enormous value for corporations while providing little direct compensation, for traders who want their speculation to fund something real, and for a platform seeking to capture value from both sides—the memecoin royalty model creates alignment where traditional mechanisms create friction.


The Zero-Sum Question

A fundamental objection demands examination: aren't memecoins just zero-sum games? For every trader who profits by selling higher, another trader bought at that higher price and will likely lose. The trading activity itself creates no value—it merely redistributes wealth from late buyers to early sellers. This is why most memecoins are described as "PvP" (player versus player) in crypto circles.

The royalty mechanism introduces something more nuanced. It creates a leak in the zero-sum game that flows to a third party: the creator. Traders remain zero-sum against each other, but a portion of every trade—win or lose—exits the game entirely and funds development work.

Think of it like a poker table with a rake. The players are zero-sum against each other, but the house extracts value continuously. In the memecoin royalty model, the "house" is the creator. The critical question becomes: is that extracted value being converted into something that benefits anyone beyond the extraction itself?

Where the model might escape zero-sum logic: The funded work can create real utility outside the trading game. Users of Yegge's Gastown orchestrator or Huntley's coding technique benefit whether or not they ever traded $GAS or $RALPH. If speculation serves as a price discovery mechanism for "community belief in a creator's potential," it functions more like an equity market than a casino—imperfect, but not purely extractive. And if memecoin funding replaces less efficient mechanisms (grant applications, VC negotiations, corporate sponsorship), the same capital achieves more by eliminating intermediaries and their overhead.

Where it remains zero-sum or worse: The trading itself is still zero-sum. Royalties actually add a negative-sum element—traders collectively lose to the creator rake on top of their losses to each other. If projects don't deliver meaningful work, traders funded nothing real; they just paid a tax on gambling. And survivorship bias hides the many launches where creators extracted royalties from hype without producing anything of value.

The honest framing: Memecoin royalties convert a zero-sum game into a negative-sum game for traders that might produce positive externalities if creators use the funding well. Whether the externalities justify the extraction depends entirely on what gets built.

This is why connecting memecoin royalties to the OSS sustainability crisis matters. If memecoin royalties fund real solutions to real problems—sustainable income for maintainers who would otherwise burn out, continued development of tools that would otherwise be abandoned—then the negative-sum trading subsidizes a public good. The traders who lose money have, in effect, made involuntary donations to open source development.

If it merely funds hype cycles and vaporware, it's just gambling with extra steps and a marketing story.

The $600,000 generated by four projects in two weeks represents either the early signs of a new funding paradigm or a particularly well-branded speculation bubble. The answer depends on what those four creators—and the ones who follow—actually build with the money.


Risks, Limits, and Open Questions

This model is not without serious concerns.

Volatility: Memecoin prices can collapse 90% in hours. Creators depending on royalty income face unpredictable revenue streams. The $600,000 earned in two weeks could become $6,000 in the next two, if the creators dont cashout.

Regulatory uncertainty: Token launches exist in legal gray zones across most jurisdictions. Creators, traders, and platforms all face potential enforcement actions as regulators catch up with the space.

Sustainability questions: Current earnings reflect launch excitement and novelty. Whether projects can maintain trading interest over months and years—generating the steady income that maintainers actually need—remains unproven.

Selection effects: The four projects highlighted here represent successes. Many more launches likely generated little income, attracted no community, and faded without notice. Survivorship bias colors the data.

The speculation trap: If creator income depends on trading volume, creators face pressure to optimize for speculation rather than software quality. The incentives could corrupt as easily as they could align.

The maintenance burden: "Vibe-coded" projects launched quickly with AI assistance may create maintenance burdens without sustainable support. The same dynamics that exhausted the xz-utils maintainer and burned out countless others could emerge in new forms, just with better initial funding.


What Comes Next

The memecoin royalty model represents an experiment in redirecting speculative capital toward public goods. The early results are striking: $600,000 in earnings, genuine projects receiving genuine funding, creators freed from grant applications and corporate negotiations.

The competitive response came quickly. On January 19, 2026—just weeks after Bags.fm's creator-funded projects began generating headlines—Pump.fun announced a $3,000,000 "Build in Public" hackathon backed by "Pump Fund," a new investment arm. The framing was telling: instead of judging projects through traditional VC criteria, participants would "tokenize" their work and let the market validate their ideas. Pump.fun, the older and more established memecoin launchpad, was adapting its model in direct response to Bags.fm's success with OSS and AI creators.

The announcement validates the core insight: speculative capital can be redirected toward building. When a platform that processed hundreds of millions in fees from joke tokens and celebrity cash-grabs pivots toward funding "projects that people actually want," something has shifted in how the market perceives value creation.

But the experiment is young—measured in weeks, not years. Whether this becomes a durable funding mechanism or a speculative bubble that happened to fund some interesting work depends on factors not yet visible: regulatory responses, platform competition, creator behavior under sustained pressure, and the simple question of whether trading interest persists beyond launch excitement.

For business observers, the case illustrates how platform design can reshape incentive structures in unexpected ways. Bags.fm's modification to the standard memecoin launchpad—adding perpetual royalties—transformed speculation from extraction to patronage. The technical change was small; the economic implications were profound.

For open source maintainers facing the same impossible choices as Pushkarev, Wathan, and countless others, the model offers something traditional funding never has: direct conversion of community support into creator income, scaled by engagement rather than committee preference, available to anyone willing to try.

Whether that's the future of OSS funding or a footnote in crypto's speculative history remains to be seen. The experiment continues.


The Tailwind Exception

The Tailwind story has a postscript that reveals the true scale of the open source funding crisis—and exposes how exceptional cases can obscure systemic problems.

Within 48 hours of Adam Wathan's January 6, 2026 layoff announcement, several major technology companies stepped forward with financial support. Google (specifically the Google AI Studio team), Vercel, Lovable, Gumroad, Macroscope, and Supabase all pledged sponsorships to help sustain Tailwind CSS. Logan Kilpatrick, group product manager for Google AI Studio, publicly announced that his team was now sponsoring the project.

The response demonstrated genuine industry solidarity. It also revealed something more troubling: Tailwind could be rescued because Tailwind matters to these companies' businesses. Tens of thousands of developers use Tailwind in production applications built on Vercel's platform, styled with tools from the broader ecosystem, and increasingly generated by AI assistants that rely on Tailwind's popularity. The utility-first framework had become infrastructure.

The irony was not lost on observers. Google's own AI products—AI Overviews, Gemini, and the search features that answer queries without sending users to documentation sites—were part of what destroyed Tailwind's business model in the first place. Yet Google was among the first to offer support when that destruction became public.

But consider what this rescue actually proves: a project can survive the AI funding crisis if it's already so successful that major corporations depend on it continuing to exist.

For every Tailwind that gets corporate sponsors after a crisis, there are thousands of open source projects that provide critical infrastructure without the visibility, the cultural cachet, or the corporate dependency that triggers rescue missions. The projects that handle datetime parsing in obscure languages, the libraries that smooth over API incompatibilities, the maintenance work that keeps older systems running—these don't get Google sponsorships. They get abandoned.

Denis Pushkarev's core-js is downloaded 43 million times per week and runs on over half the world's top 10,000 websites, yet corporate donations collapsed to $400 per month—insufficient to support a family. The maintainer of xz-utils worked alone for years on compression software used by virtually every Linux distribution, until burnout made him vulnerable to social engineering by malicious actors. The researcher building experimental tools that might become essential in three years—but aren't yet—will find no corporate sponsors.

The memecoin royalty model offers something that corporate sponsorship fundamentally cannot: funding before proof of corporate utility. The traders speculating on $GSD or $RALPH aren't asking whether major tech companies depend on these projects. They're betting on potential, on novelty, on the creator's track record, on the vibe. That speculation—chaotic, volatile, often irrational—can fund work that no grant committee would approve and no corporate sponsor would understand.

When Tailwind got rescued, it validated the old model for exceptional cases. When $GAS generated $303,000 in two weeks for Yegge's multi-agent orchestrator—a project with no corporate dependency, no proven revenue model, and no guarantee of success—it demonstrated an alternative mechanism that might work for everyone else.

The question isn't whether memecoin royalties can replace corporate sponsorship for projects like Tailwind. The question is whether they can fund the thousands of projects that will never be popular enough, established enough, or corporately important enough to get rescued when their revenue collapses.

The corporate response to Tailwind's crisis was heartening. It was also a reminder that sustainability mechanisms designed around exceptional cases leave the majority to fail in silence.


Contribute to This Research

This article is part of an ongoing research project tracking how memecoin royalties are changing open source funding. The projects featured here represent early examples—we believe there are many more creators experimenting with this model.

View the live dashboard: vibefunded.xyz

Know a project we should track? If you've found a creator or project using token royalties to fund open source software, AI tools, or experimental development, we want to hear about it.

Submit a project via GitHub Issue →

Criteria for inclusion:

  • Token launched on a royalty-based platform (Bags.fm or similar)
  • Connected to actual development work (not purely speculative memecoins)
  • Creator has public or verifiable presence with demonstrable work
  • Ideally: public GitHub repository or project documentation

This research benefits from community contributions. Each new project helps build a clearer picture of whether memecoin royalties represent a sustainable funding mechanism or a speculative moment.


This analysis examines disruptive funding models in open source software and AI development. Cryptocurrency markets are volatile; this analysis does not constitute investment advice.

Big fan of open source software but… I believe it’s time we reevaluate the role of shared libraries when the value of code has drastically gone down, our universe it’s changing and capitalism is not coming to save us.

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