Explore our FAQs for fast, informative answers to frequently asked questions and common concerns.
Tillio supports six contribution categories: Technical (code, infrastructure), Research & Intellectual (analysis, expertise), Product & Design (UI/UX, specifications), Marketing & Distribution (content, outreach), Business & Enablement (operations, partnerships), and Stewardship & Risk (governance, compliance).
Our AI evaluation engine analyzes contributions based on configurable weights for different work types, considering factors like complexity, impact, and quality. Human oversight is built in for edge cases and disputes.
Funding models define how contributions are compensated. Options include fixed pools (distribute a set amount), revenue share (percentage of project income), milestone-based (pay on completion), and hybrid approaches.
Yes, Tillio integrates with GitHub, GitLab, Linear, Slack, and other tools via our API and webhooks. You can also build custom integrations using our Python/JavaScript SDKs.
Payouts are processed through Stripe Connect. Contributors connect their accounts once, then receive automatic payments based on their evaluated contributions. Multiple currencies and payment schedules are supported.
Absolutely. Tillio is designed for distributed teams including open source projects. Track contributions from anywhere, recognize all forms of work, and optionally connect funding to fairly compensate contributors.
Units represent your share of a project's economics. When you contribute work, AI evaluates it and assigns units based on impact, novelty, and alignment. Units vest immediately and entitle you to a proportional share of the project's revenue distributions.
Yes. Install the Tillio CLI with 'curl -fsSL https://downloads.tillio.ai/cli/install.sh | sh', authenticate with 'tillio login', and submit contributions from any git repo with 'tillio submit'. You can also integrate with GitHub Actions or any CI/CD pipeline using our REST API.
No. GitHub integration is optional. You can submit contributions manually through the web UI, via the CLI from any git repo, or through the REST API. GitHub integration enables automatic commit ingestion and verification, but it's not required.