Sentry, a popular error tracking platform, has been nominated for Indeed's FOSS Contributor Fund and instead decided to redistribute the award, contributing $10,000 of the allocated funds towards open source projects that Sentry relies on. The company prioritized funding smaller organizations and projects it already supports, aiming to contribute to underfunded initiatives. Five projects were selected: Black, a Python code formatter; Gimli, a Rust library for crash report analysis; PyPI, the repository managing Python's public packages; Pytest, a popular testing library; and Structlog, an alternative logging module. This initiative not only supports open source projects but also reflects Sentry's commitment to contributing $100,000 to open source funding in 2020, five times its traditional amount.