Schlagwort: Linux Foundation

  • Arduino Donation Program: Making a difference in the open-source community!

    Arduino Donation Program: Making a difference in the open-source community!

    Reading Time: 3 minutes

    Arduino Donation Program: Making a difference in the open-source community!

    Arduino TeamDecember 1st, 2020

    As an open-source company, Arduino aims to ensure that open-source continues to thrive and remains sustainable for the long term. The Arduino Donation Program is intended to fund projects and institutions that make a lasting difference in the worldwide open-source community. 

    Arduino’s corporate giving efforts are focused on not-for-profit and charitable organizations supporting the free and open-source software movement. Arduino Donation Program recipients have been selected according to the importance of their project, and above all, their dedication to making technology accessible to everyone.

    A giving back program

    Free and open-source software is created as a collaborative effort in which programmers improve upon the code and share the changes within the community. Arduino endorses the philosophy of creating free tools that allow users to focus on “what” they are developing rather than the “how.”

    Arduino continuously releases open-source products and code, which thanks to community members buying original products, enables Arduino to continue to invest in R&D and develop new innovative hardware and software. Arduino benefits from the continuous contribution of the Arduino community along with many other projects. We are infinitely grateful for these efforts, and are aware that the rich and diverse Arduino ecosystem would not exist without their contributions. 

    From now on, Arduino will donate to the free software and open-source projects that it collaborates with as well as those that embody the Arduino approach and philosophy. 

    Arduino has donated $55,000 to date in 2020. The institutions who have received a $5,000 grant from Arduino are:

    • The Processing Foundation promotes software literacy within the visual arts, and visual literacy within technology-related fields — and makes these fields accessible to diverse communities. The Processing software is free and open-source.
    • Creative Commons is a non-profit organization devoted to expanding the range of creative works available for others to build upon legally and to share. The Creative Commons licenses let creators communicate which rights they reserve and which rights they waive for the benefit of recipients or other creators.
    • Founded in 2015, the RISC-V Foundation is a free and open ISA enabling a new era of processor innovation through open standard collaboration. 
    • The Free Software Foundation is a charity that empowers users to control technology. Free Software gives everybody the rights to use, understand, adapt, and share software. These rights help support other fundamental freedoms like freedom of speech, press and privacy.
    • The Linux Foundation is dedicated to building sustainable ecosystems around open-source projects to accelerate technology development and industry adoption. Founded in 2000, it provides support for open-source communities through financial and intellectual resources, infrastructure, services, events, and training. 
    • The Open Source Security Foundation (OpenSFF) is a cross-industry effort hosted by the Linux Foundation to improve the security of open source software. The foundation includes technical initiatives and working groups that address vulnerability disclosures, security tooling, security best practices, and the identification of security threats to the open-source project. 

    At Arduino, we really hope that more companies involved in open-source hardware and software will follow Arduino’s example.

    Open-source exists if all of us participate,”  said Arduino co-founder Massimo Banzi. “The open-source creators have to be supported but also incentivized: effectively doing open-source is a lot of work. There are multiple ways to keep open-source alive; we decided to take 50,000 dollars and donate back to a bunch of open-source projects and I am sort of challenging other companies whose business model benefits from open-source to also donate to such causes. If we all donate, these open-source projects can thrive and grow to the benefit of all.”

    If you need more information about the program, please contact press@arduino.cc.

    Website: LINK

  • Arduino joins the Open Source Security Foundation

    Arduino joins the Open Source Security Foundation

    Reading Time: 2 minutes

    Arduino joins the Open Source Security Foundation

    Arduino TeamOctober 30th, 2020

    As an open-source project, Arduino has always considered security a top priority: making tools and products easy to use for our community has consistently been as important as making them secure. 

    Today, we are excited to announce that Arduino has joined the Open Source Security Foundation (OpenSFF), the collaborative cross-industry effort to secure the open-source ecosystem.

    Hosted at the Linux Foundation, the OpenSFF brings together the efforts of the Core Infrastructure Initiative (CII) and GitHub’s Open Source Security Coalition and is committed to working both upstream and with existing communities to advance the security of open-source software. The foundation will initially include technical initiatives and working groups that will address vulnerability disclosures, security tooling, security best practices, and the identification of security threats to the open-source project. 

    Arduino is proud to become a member of the OpenSFF alongside GitHub, Google, IBM, Facebook, Red Hat, Facebook, Huawei Technologies, and Samsung. Arduino’s membership to the OpenSFF is also part of the Arduino Donation Program, our philanthropic initiative to fund projects and institutions that can make the difference for the worldwide open-source community.

    Our aim is to make complex technologies simple to use for everyday people and security out of the box is part of the user experience we strive for. We believe that working with skilled security experts and industries across the globe is crucial in identifying security weaknesses and vulnerabilities, “said Arduino co-founder Massimo Banzi. “We are excited to join the Open Source Security Foundation and we look forward to collaborating with other members to improve the security of any open-source ecosystem.”

    Website: LINK