All Pantrypoints Code is Now Open Source
We're releasing the complete Pantrypoints codebase under the MIT license — because the infrastructure for community exchange should belong to everyone.
All Pantrypoints Code is Now Open Source
Starting today, every repository in the Pantrypoints ecosystem is available on GitHub under the MIT license.
Why Open Source?
The infrastructure for community exchange should be a public good. We believe no single company should own the tools communities need to organize themselves.
Open-sourcing Pantrypoints means:
- Any developer can contribute improvements
- Any community can self-host their own instance
- Any researcher can study and build on the protocol
- Any NGO can deploy it without licensing costs
What's Available
All active repositories are now public:
- pantrypoints/hub — Community management dashboard
- pantrypoints/farm — Pantrypreneur Farm app
- pantrypoints/market — Pantrypreneur Market app
- pantrypoints/pool — Pantrypoints Pool app
- pantrypoints/web — The unified web portal
- pantrypoints/pantrychain — The distributed exchange ledger
- pantrypoints/docs — Full documentation
How to Contribute
We welcome contributions of all kinds:
- Code — Bug fixes, features, performance improvements
- Translations — We need help with Filipino, Indonesian, Thai, and more
- Documentation — Guides for community organizers and developers
- Design — UI/UX improvements and assets
- Research — Studies on the impact of exchange systems
Check our Contributing Guide to get started.
Join the Community
Our developer community lives in GitHub Discussions and a public Discord server. Whether you're a seasoned engineer or just learning to code, there's a place for you in Pantrypoints.
The moneyless economy needs all of us. Come build it.
Related Articles
Introducing Pantrypoints: Building the Moneyless Economy
Today we launch Pantrypoints — an open-source ecosystem of apps enabling communities to exchange real value without money.
What Is the Moneyless Economy? A Beginner's Guide
A clear explanation of how communities can thrive without money — and how Pantrypoints makes it practical.