Feature It is 2025. Linux will turn 34 and the Free Software Foundation (FSF) 40. For the EU and Europe at large, which is famously experimental with government deployments of open source tech, behind initiatives to promote open licensing , and whose governments promote equal opportunity for FOSS vendors in public tendering , it's a crunch point.

OpenSSF warns that open source infrastructure doesn't run on thoughts and prayers

In the late 1990s and early 2000s it was about free access to software, about the ability to change and contribute. But the whole selling point of open source has changed a lot in the past two or so decades. There is no question the legacy way of developing software behind closed doors inhibits collaboration and innovation. And open source was initially just a way

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