List of free and open-source software organizations
The following are notable organizations devoted to the advocacy, legal aid, financial aid, technical aid, governance, etc. of free and open-source software (FOSS) as a whole, or of one or more specific FOSS projects. For projects that have their own foundation or are part of an umbrella organization, the primary goal is often to provide a mechanism to fund development of the software.
Most of these groups are structured as nonprofit–charity organizations.
This list includes no businesses that aim to make money from free and open-source software.
Location-specific
Africa
- Ma3bar – a United Nations-affiliated organization, promotes open source software within the Arab world.
Asia
- Free Software Movement of India – founded 2010; a coalition of organizations that advocate use of free software within India.
- Regional movements
- Sectoral movements
- Appropriate Technology Promotion Society
- Knowledge Commons
- National Consultative Committee of Computer Teachers Association (NCCCTA)
- Open Source Geospatial Foundation India (OSGEO India)
- Free Software Foundation of India – founded 2001
- International Center for Free and Opensource Software (ICFOSS) – founded 2011; an autonomous organization set up by the Government of Kerala, India for free and open source software.
- International Open Source Network (IOSN) – existed 2004–2006; promoted use of open-source software in Asia.
- Open Source Alliance of Central Asia – founded 2011; advocates for use of open source software in Central Asia.
- Hamakor – founded 2003; promotes use of free and open-source software in Israel.
- FOSS United Foundation – founded 2020.
Australia
- Open Source Industry Australia – founded 2004; promotes open source in Australia, and use of Australian open source software and services around the world.
Europe
- Free Software Foundation Europe – founded 2001
- Irish Free Software Organisation – promotes use of free software in Ireland.
- OpenForum Europe – founded 2002; advocates for use of open source software in Europe.
- Open Technologies Alliance (GFOSS) – founded 2008; promotes use of open-source software, open hardware, open data and content in education, in government and the private sector, at all levels, in Greece and cooperates closely with similar organizations in Europe and worldwide.
- Open Source Observatory and Repository – a project launched by the European Commission, to support the distribution and re-use of software developed by or for public sector administrations across Europe
- April – founded 1996; promotes free software in the French-speaking world.
- Associação Nacional para o Software Livre – founded 2001; promotes use of free software in Portugal.
- Digital Freedom Foundation (DFF) – founded 2004; organizes Software and other Freedom Days
- "Ceata" Foundation, Romania - officially founded in 2013, but active since 2008 as an informal group
- "ProLinux" Association, Romania - founded in 2009
- "ROSEdu" Association, Romania
- "Informatica la Castel" Free Software Summer School, Arad, Romania - founded in 2003
- Open Source Business Alliance, Germany.
North America
South America
Oceania
Umbrella organizations
The following organizations host, and provide other services, for a variety of different open-source projects:
- Apache Software Foundation (ASF) – founded 1999 with headquarters in Wakefield, MA, USA; manages development of over 350 Apache software projects, including the Apache HTTP Server.[1]
- Center for the Cultivation of Technology - founded 2016 in Germany, headquarters in Berlin; hosts a variety of projects.
- Eclipse Foundation – founded 2004 with headquarters in Brussels, Belgium; supports development of over 350 Eclipse projects, including the Eclipse IDE.
- Free Software Foundation (FSF) – founded 1985 with headquarters in Boston, MA, USA; supports the free software movement, which promotes the universal freedom to study, distribute, create, and modify computer software
- GNOME Foundation – founded 2000 with headquarters in Orinda, CA, USA; coordinates the efforts of the GNOME Project, including GNOME
- KDE e.V. – founded 1997 with headquarters in Berlin, Germany; coordinates efforts of KDE Projects including KDE
- Linux Foundation (LF) – founded 2000 with headquarters in San Francisco, CA, USA; supports development of the Linux kernel, and over 60 other projects, only some of which are connected to Linux, and advocacy, training, and standards.
- OASIS Open - founded in 1993; provides communities with foundation-level support, IP and license management, governance, and outreach with an optional path for work to be recognized by de jure standards organizations and referenced in public procurement.
- OpenInfra Foundation – founded 2012 with headquarters in Austin, TX; focused on the development and support of open source infrastructure projects, including OpenStack. Previously known as the OpenStack Foundation.
- OW2 – founded 2007 with headquarters in Paris, France; focused on infrastructure for enterprise middleware
- Open Source Initiative (OSI) – founded 1998 with headquarters in Palo Alto, CA, USA; steward of the Open Source Definition, the set of rules that define open source software
- Sahana Software Foundation – founded 2009 with headquarters in Los Angeles, CA, USA; for humanitarian-related software
- Software Freedom Conservancy – founded 2006 with headquarters in New York, NY, USA; hosts around 40 projects.
- Software in the Public Interest (SPI) – founded 1997 with headquarters in New York, NY, USA; originally only for the Debian project, it now hosts around 35 projects, some of which are umbrella projects themselves.
- VideoLAN – founded 2009 with headquarters in Paris, France; multimedia-related projects
Domain-specific organizations
The following organizations host open-source projects that relate to a specific technical area.
Project-specific organizations
A large number of single-project organizations (often called "foundations") exist; in most cases, their primary purpose is to provide a mechanism to bring funds from the software's users, including both individuals and companies, to its developers.
Cause-specific
- Ada Initiative – existed 2011–2015; advocated the participation of women in FOSS development.
- PyLadies – founded 2011; advocates for female participation in the Python community.
Legal aid
- IfrOSS – founded 2015; provides legal services for free software in Germany.
- Software Freedom Law Center – founded 2005; provides free legal representation and other legal services to not-for-profit FOSS projects.
User groups
References
|
|