3.14 Open Source Software | HHS.gov

Overview & Approach

HHS is actively using and repurposing free open source software and collaborating with interagency and intra-agency partners given the numerous benefits associated with the shared approach. Consistent with the Federal Source Code Policy, usage of open source software can fuel innovation, lower costs, and benefit the public. The federal Policy is designed to support improved access to custom software code developed for the Federal government. Furthermore, open source software can support the Digital Government Strategy's "Shared Platform" approach, which enables Federal employees to work together-both within and across agencies to reduce costs, streamline development, apply uniform standards, and ensure consistency in creating and delivering information.

Using FOSS allows for product customization, advances interoperability between tools, and improves the overall quality of the final product. This creates real economic value by lowering the burden of replicating similar work or by allowing the private sector to build off of and create new businesses around previously-developed code. The 2014 passage of the Federal Information Technology Acquisition Reform Act (FITARA) created an opportunity to significant policy and administrative reform, including the requirement that each agency have a software asset and management plan. While much of the software asset and management plan focuses on category management and acquisition of software licenses, the implementation of FITARA also provides agencies with an opportunity to bolster their use of free open source software, include it within the software asset and management plan for greater transparency, and share it throughout the agency to illustrate the value of free open source software when compared with expensive software licensing and potential vendor lock-in.

The HHS CIOs office, as well as other agency divisions, has been conducting asset analysis and is creating and planning to share a listing of available contracts with agency leaders. To the extent practicable, this creates yet another opportunity to break down the silos by centralizing active, upcoming, or discarded open source software projects and coding in order for HHS and other agencies to identify, collaborate, or piggyback off of existing projects to lower costs and maximize savings to taxpayers.

There is currently no mechanism in place for broadly sharing code among Federal Agencies exclusively, though some of the source code repositories shared publicly are meant to be more beneficial to other Federal Agencies than to the public at large. For example, the source code repository named ckanext-datajson in the HHS collection is meant to help other Federal Agencies meet expectations of the Open Data Initiative by providing an extension to the open source CKAN application that many Federal Agencies use to catalog the datasets they make publicly-accessible.

Location and Examples of Publicly-accessible Code

Various organizations within HHS have openly shared code on the GitHub website, popular among open source projects. The repositories of source code made available to the public can be easily viewed by visiting the website locations anonymously, (i.e. without logging in to a GitHub account).

The two most popular locations where HHS publishes source code on GitHub are https://github.com/HHS and https://github.com/HHSIDEALab. A smaller number of source code repositories shared publicly by HHS can be found at https://github.com/FDA and https://github.com/AHRQ. Open FDA is another popular resource for developers and researchers, who will have easy access to high-value FDA public data through RESTful APIs and structured file downloads. In short, our goal is to make it simple for an application, mobile, or web developer, or all stripes of researchers, to use data from FDA in their work.

Weve done an extensive amount of research both internally and with potential external developers to identify which datasets are both in demand and have a high barrier of entry. As a result, our initial pilot project will cover a number of datasets from various areas within FDA, defined into three broad focus areas: Adverse Events, Product Recalls, and Product Labeling. These APIs wont have one-on-one matching to FDAs internal data organizational structure; rather, we intend to abstract on top of a myriad of datasets and provide appropriate metadata and identifiers when possible. Of course, well always make the raw source data available for people who prefer to work that way (and its good to mention that we also will not be releasing any data that could potentially be used to identify individuals or other private information).

Pillbox is one of the largest free databases of prescription and over-the-counter drug information and images, combining data from pharmaceutical companies, Food and Drug Administration, National Institutes of Health, and Department of Veterans Affairs. Pillbox for Developers is a resource for getting open access to the data processing code, understanding the methodology, and contributing to the project.

TurboTax, in conjunction with HHS, has released Benefit Assist, a new open source software tool to help feed more Americans. Americans who dont have enough money for food, approximately one in six Americans, will have an easier time finding out if they are eligible and applying for Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP)/Food Stamps with the release of Intuit TurboTax Benefits Assist as free and open source software and with the software code freely available as hosted by The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services at the United States Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) following collaboration with New York City Council Member Ben Kallos. States that currently must administer SNAP will be able to save money by using Benefits Assist and can collectively build upon it to reduce overhead and save our nation billions.

Intuits TurboTax launched Benefit Assist in 2015, offering to screen 30.7 million Americans who file taxes with TurboTax an opportunity to learn if they are eligible for SNAP and even submit an application using tax information they had already entered. In 2016, Benefit Assist was expanded to include Federal Communications Commissions Lifeline free mobile phone service. Now in an effort to see even more Americans served Intuit is releasing the source code for its Benefit Assist search, rules engine, as well as benefit rules and definitions using the free and open source GNU Affero General Public License so that anyone whether state government, non-profit or a developer can freely use, share and improve upon Benefit Assist to fight hunger.

President Barack Obama has laid the groundwork to streamline access to nutrition, home energy, cash assistance, and other human services necessary to stay healthy facilitated by integrating eligibility and enrollment with Medicaid and CHIP at the state-level through the Affordable Care Act, Executive Order 13563, Executive Memorandum, waivers, and guidance. Enhanced federal funding is available through 2018 for each state to integrate, interoperate, and improve the delivery of federally assisted benefits to their residents by leveraging information sharing across health and human service agencies to automatically recertify or provide benefits.

In order to expand access to government human service benefits and in partnership with the Robert Wood Johnson Foundations State Health Reform Assistance Network the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services at HHS Idea Lab, have developed a free and open source tool that States can use to facilitate Modified Adjusted Gross Income (MAGI) eligibility determination for Medicaid and CHIP called MAGI in the Cloud, freely available on GitHub. The free and open source software is now operated and maintained by the New England State Consortium Systems Organization (NESCO) and in use by the District of Columbia, New Jersey, North Dakota and Tennessee. The Benefit Assist tools source code will be freely available alongside MAGI in the Cloud available at https://github.com/HHSIDEAlab. The HHS Assistant Secretary for Planning and Evaluation (ASPE) has been working on a comprehensive project to modernize their systems, switching from the use of legacy systems to open source software. This multi-year project involves a complete analysis, redesign, migration, implementation, and maintenance of a new web content management system (WCMS) as well as a public-facing website, intranet, and two legacy databases as well as hosting and marketing. The HHS Office on Womens Health (OWH) recently awarded a new contract to modernize an aging online data query system, which will only use free open source software, including robust mapping tools that take advantage of modern web geographic information system (GIS) technology and Open Geospatial Consortium standards. The new, interactive online data query system will feature a user-friendly computer interface for queries that actively accesses and ingests data from a variety of sources using machine readable outputs, such as APIs.

Approach to Collaboration, More Broad Usage, Centralization of, and Publicly-available Free Open Source Software Code

HHS, like many other agencies, continues to make better use of open source software in developing or redeveloping aging legacy systems while finding collaborative, innovative ways to share these efforts and successful outcomes throughout the federal government as well as the public at-large.

HHS actively collaborates on various projects with digital and open source software leaders, including the U.S. Digital Service and GSAs 18F. 18F has recently rolled out Cloud.gov, an open source Platform-as-a-Service (PaaS) solution, which will further enhance HHS ability to embrace and share more open source software tools.

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3.14 Open Source Software | HHS.gov

35 Top Open Source Companies – Datamation

If you think of open source software as being primarily the work of hobbyists and lone developers, your impression is sorely out of date. While independent developers are still an important part of the open source community, today much of the work on open source projects is being done by corporate developers.

In a recent appearance at the Open Source Summit, Linux founder Linus Torvalds acknowledged this corporate influence and welcomed it. "It's very important to have companies in open source," he said. "It's one thing I have been very happy about."

The list below highlights some of the leading for-profit companies that are using, sponsoring and contributing to open source projects. It includes a mix of large enterprises, small startups and everything in between. Some of the companies exclusively offer products based on open source software, while others sell a mix of proprietary and open source solutions. But all of these companies play a significant role in the open source community.

Please note that this is not a ranking; the companies are arranged in alphabetical order. If you think we left off a company that should have been on the list, feel free to make your case in the Comments section below.

Headquarters: San Jose, Calif.

Employees: More than 15,000

Publicly Traded: ADBE (NASDAQ)

Annual Revenue: $5.854 billion

Why It Made the List: Adobe has a strong commitment to open source and has more than 250 public repositories on its GitHub site. Some of its best-known open source projects are developer tools like the PhoneGap web development framework, the Brackets text editor and the Topcoat CSS library. Adobe staff also contribute regularly to other open source projects like Gecko, Blink, WebKit, Apache Cordova, Flex, Felix and many others.

Headquarters: San Francisco, Calif.

Employees: 564

Publicly Traded: No

Annual Revenue: Not available

Why It Made the List: You might not have heard of Automattic before, but you have almost certainly heard of its best-known creation WordPress. According to the website, WordPress currently "powers 28 percent of the Internet." Although the WordPress open source project is now handled by a foundation, Automattic continues to contribute to its code, and it runs WordPress.com. It also participates in many other open source projects like WooCommerce and BuddyPress.

Headquarters: Burlington, Mass.

Employees: More than 320

Publicly Traded: No

Annual Revenue: Not available

Why It Made the List: Unlike most of the other companies on this list, Black Duck is noteworthy not for its own contributions to open source projects but because it makes it easier for other organizations to use open source software. It offers three key projects: Hub for identifying and managing open source software at use in an environment, Protex for ensuring compliance with open source licenses and company policies, and Security Checker for identifying security vulnerabilities in open source software. It boasts more than 2,000 customers, including Intel, Nintendo, SAP and Samsung.

Headquarters: London, UK

Employees: More than 550

Publicly Traded: No

Annual Revenue: $103.3 million

Why It Made the List: This is the company behind Ubuntu, one of the most popular Linux distributions on the planet. In fact, the company claims that Ubuntu is the worlds most popular operating system across public clouds and OpenStack clouds. Canonicals mission is to make open source software available to people everywhere. We believe the best way to fuel innovation is to give the innovators the technology they need.

Headquarters: Seattle, Wash.

Employees: Less than 500 (est.)

Publicly Traded: No

Annual Revenue: Not available

Why It Made the List: Chef is the name of both an open source systems integration framework and the company that owns that framework. As DevOps has become more widely adopted, Chef has emerged as one of the most popular tools for automating configuration management. In fact one TechCrunch ranking of the most popular open source projects listed Chef as number 23. Staff from the company also contribute to other open source projects, and it has approximately 70 repositories on its public GitHub site.

Headquarters: San Jose, Calif.

Employees: Less than 500 (est.)

Publicly Traded: No

Annual Revenue: Not available

Why It Made the List: Another favorite among DevOps teams, CloudBees is the company behind Jenkins, which was number 14 on that TechCrunch list of popular open source projects. Jenkins is an open source automation server, which means that it helps speed up software development by automating processes like documentation, testing, deployment, and more. The company claims that Jenkins is "the world's most popular pen source automation server, with hundreds of thousands of active installations around the world," and Jenkins staff have written 80 percent of the core Jenkins code.

Headquarters: Palo Alto, CA

Employees: Approx. 1,600

Publicly Traded: CLDR (NYSE)

Annual Revenue: $166.05 million

Why It Made the List: Because it offers one of the most popular supported versions of Hadoop, Cloudera has become increasingly important as the big data trend has taken off. Its chief architect, Doug Cutting, founded Hadoop, and the company says it has contributed more code to the Hadoop ecosystem than anyone else. Its employees have started more than 20 Hadoop-related projects and are very active on Apache Foundation projects.

Headquarters: Palo Alto, Calif.

Employees: Less than 200 (est.)

Publicly Traded: No

Annual Revenue: Not available

Why It Made the List: A major player in the big data space, Confluent is the company behind Apache Kafka, which was 20th on that list of most popular open source projects. The company describes Kafka as "a distributed streaming platform capable of handling trillions of events a day." It was originally created at LinkedIn (see below) and was released under an open source license in 2011. The team behind the project founded Confluent as an independent company, and today it offers a commercially supported version of the software.

Headquarters: San Francisco, Calif.

Employees: Less than 200 (est.)

Publicly Traded: No

Annual Revenue: Not available

Why It Made the List: Databricks is the company that supports another very popular big data streaming project Apache Spark. The developers that founded the project started Databricks in 2013 to offer commercial support for the effort. According to the company, Spark has the "largest open source community in big data, with over 1,000 contributors from 250+ organizations." Well-known Databricks customers include NBCUniversal, HP, Shell, Cisco, 3M and many others.

Headquarters: Santa Clara, Calif.

Employees: More than 400

Publicly Traded: No

Annual Revenue: Not available

Why It Made the List: DataStax offers a commercially supported version of the Apache Cassandra NoSQL database, as well as a managed cloud solution also based on Cassandra. It claims more than 500 customers in more than 50 countries. Well-known companies that use its products include Netflix, Safeway, Adobe, Intuit and eBay.

Headquarters: San Francisco, Calif.

Employees: More than 120 (est.)

Publicly Traded: No

Annual Revenue: Not available

Why It Made the List: Over the last few years, the Docker containerization technology has emerged as one of the most influential open source projects for enterprise users. It has more than 32,000 stars on GitHub and has been downloaded more than 8 billion times. The company behind the technology, also named Docker, was listed third on the list of companies with the most GitHub contributors in 2016. The Docker software is very popular with companies using agile and DevOps approaches, and the company claims, "On average companies using Docker experience a 7X improvement in how frequently they are able to ship software."

Headquarters: Mountain View, Calif.

Employees: More than 500

Publicly Traded: No

Annual Revenue: Not available

Why It Made the List: Best known for its open source Elasticsearch project, Elastic offers a complete stack of products designed that can "reliably and securely take data from any source, in any format, and search, analyze, and visualize it in real time." Elasticsearch ranked seventh on the index of popular open source projects, and it has 25,254 stars on GitHub. Elastic also has several other open source projects, including Kibana, Beats and Logstash.

Headquarters: Menlo Park, Calif.

Employees: More than 20,000

Publicly Traded: FB (NASDAQ)

Annual Revenue: $27.638 billion

Why It Made the List: The leading social network has emerged as one of the leading advocates for open source software and hardware. In 2016, it was second on the list of companies with the most GitHub contributors (15,682). Its most popular open source projects include the React and React-native JavaScript development tools, Flow, HHVM, Relay and many others.

Headquarters: San Francisco, Calif.

Employees: 672

Publicly Traded: No

Annual Revenue: Not available

Why It Made the List: GitHub has become the de facto repository for open source projects. In a 2016 report, it boasted more than 5.8 million active users, more than 331,000 active organizations, and more than 19.4 million active repositories. The company has also created several open source projects of its own, including the Atom text editor, Hubot and Git Large File Storage (LFS).

Headquarters: Menlo Park, Calif.

Employees: More than 57,000

Publicly Traded: GOOGL and GOOG (NASDAQ)

Annual Revenue: $89.5 Billion

Why It Made the List: Having released or contributed to more than 2,000 open source projects, Google is one of the most ardent corporate users and supporters of open source. It was fifth on the list of companies that had the most GitHub contributors in 2016 (and it also owns Angular, which was fourth on the list.) Well-known Google open source projects include Android, Chromium, Dart, Go, Kubernetes, TensorFlow and many others.

Headquarters: San Francisco, Calif.

Employees: Less than 50 (est.)

Publicly Traded: No

Annual Revenue: Not available

Why It Made the List: Gradle is the name of an open source Devops build tool and the company that maintains it. It was listed as number 17 on the TechCrunch list of top open source projects and claims more than 4 million downloads every month. Its users include many of the companies on this list, such as LinkedIn, Android, Netflix, Adobe and Elastic.

Headquarters: San Francisco, Calif.

Employees: Less than 250 (est.)

Publicly Traded: No

Annual Revenue: Not available

Why It Made the List: Another DevOps tools vendor, Hashicorp has created several open source projects, most of which are related to cloud infrastructure automation. The most notable of its projects is the Vagrant configuration tool, which was ranked as the 15th top open source project in existence. Its other open source efforts include Packer, Terraform, Vault, Consul and Nomad.

Headquarters: Santa Clara, Calif.

Employees: 1,110 (est.)

Publicly Traded: HDP (NASDAQ)

Annual Revenue: $184.5 million

Why It Made the List: Like Cloudera, Hortonworks offers an extremely popular distribution of Hadoop, which was 6th on the list of top open source projects and is nearly synonymous with big data. The company says it believes "in a 100% open approach for everything. We reject outright the notion that vendors only succeed through lock-in and proprietary technologies. We believe that open source spurs innovation."

Headquarters: Shenzhen, Guangdong, China

Employees: Approx. 180,000

Publicly Traded: No

Annual Revenue: $75.103 billion

Why It Made the List: This Chinese technology firm might not be the first that most people think of when it comes to open source development, but in recent years it has been contributing heavily to Linux. In The Linux Foundation's 2017 report on kernel development, Huawei was ranked 25th among companies contributing changes to the operating system and fourth among companies that were "most active in bringing new developers into the community."

Headquarters: Armonk, N.Y.

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35 Top Open Source Companies - Datamation

5 Reliable Websites for Downloading Free and Open Source …

Brief: If you are looking for free and open source software, here are some websites from where you can download free software.

Where can I download open source software?

I have been asked this question several times and I usually have the same answer. So I thought instead of replying to individual emails, I would put a list of sources in an article so other people can also benefit from it.

You can always find software in the software center of your Linux distributions, the description usually specify whether or not it is open source. Of course, project websites also distribute the software. But apart from them, if you are in browsing mode and just looking for interesting softwares to download, there are several websites that list and host open source software.

Some websites provide a way to effectively collaborate for open source software development but that is not our focus here. Well be focusing on web-portals that host and distribute open source projects.

Just to clarify, the list is not in any specific order. So, here we go with the list of websites that host or list open source software. Feel free to bookmark them.

SourceForge is one of the earliest portals to host and distribute open source software.Over the years, SourceForge has become one of the premierresourcesforopen source projects.

SourceForge boasts of hosting over 500,000 projects and has millions of registered users. It sees over 4 million downloads a day from over 30 million monthly users.

You can find featured open source projects on its homepage along with editors choice projects. You can also browse software in various categories. A search option is available too.

SourceForge also provides stats on downloads so you can see if the project is popular or not. The project page also shows which operating system is supported and which license is used.

Registered members can also rate and review software, similar to what you see on Play Store and App Store.

SourceForge ran into controversy in 2013-14 when it tried to monetize the downloads with adware. Thankfully, it is now owned by Slashdot Media and its president Logan Abbott has ensured that the software remains free from ads.

Logan has also indicated that there will be a redesign of the website soon giving it a more modern look and making it more user-friendly.

OSDN stands for Open Source Development Network. It provides a bunch of free-of-charge services for open source software developers. These services include SVN/Git/Mercurial/Bazaar/CVS repositories, mailing lists, bug tracking system, bulletin board and forum, website hosting, release file download service, file archive, complete backup, shell environment etc.

Over 55,000 projects use OSDN services. Even big names like Manjaro Linux host their project on OSDN.

As and end user, you can use OSDN for finding and downloading open source software. Their download page has a list of software categories you can browse through and download.

FossHubwas founded in 2007 with the goal of becoming reliable place for users who wish to download their favorite software titles and as a trustworthy partner for certain free projects.

It provides fast worldwide servers and optimized pages for a fast load and download of open source software. They have only direct download links so no further redirection or waiting time there.

Project page lists the total number of downloads. It also shows the supported operating systems.

You can also rate and review the software, even if you are not a registered member.

Just to be clear, FossHub also hosts selected few closed-source freeware. This may confuse some people as they might expect FossHub to host only free and open source software.

It would be better if they clearly mention on each project page if the concerned software is FOSS or not.

GitHub is slightly different from the two discussed above. GitHub is more focused on hosting source code and project development. But it is also extensively used for distributing software.

Projects can make their own web pages on GitHub and can provide the direct download from it. Software can also be downloaded directly from the main repository.

As an end user, you wont find GitHub very friendly for browsing software and downloading it. But if you are a developer, GitHub is heaven for you.

F-Droid is a platform to list and distribute free and open source software for Android.

You can browse FOSS Android apps in various categories. You can also download the APK files directly from the website but it is recommended to use F-Droid client for installing the apps.

With F-Droid client, your installed Android app will get updates. If you directly use the APK, it wont get updates and thus will pose a security risk.

You can visit their website below:

I would like to mentionSavannah from GNU for downloading free and open source software here. Its an old-school website from FSF that I dont find very user-friendly. However, you can be sure to get 100 percent free and open source software here.

alternativeTo is also a good place to find open source alternative software recommendations. You can filter by platform and licenses to ensure that you are getting the appropriate recommendation. However, it doesnt host the projects itself.

Now, this list may not be exhaustive and you might know of some other such websites that host and distribute open source software. If so, please mention them in the comment section below and help me improve this list of websites to download open source software?

Like what you read? Please share it with others.

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Open source licence series – Altus: open source is big business, get used to it – ComputerWeekly.com

Open source grew, it proliferated and it became something that many previously proprietary-only software vendors embraced as a key means of development but the issue of how open source software is licenced is still the stuff of some debate.

The Computer Weekly Open Source Insider team now features a series of guest posts examing in the ups & downs and ins & out of open source software licencing.

Technical Consultant, Sarah Bateman at financial services software company Altus writes from this point forward.

The idea that open source developers are college students, creating some really cool software that big organisations then exploit and dont give anything back may have been valid 20 years ago, but not today, its not how things work.

Open source is now big, with major players driving innovation, like the OpenBank Project, the Banking API platform and OpenLogic.

For a working example, AT&T is (obviously) a household name and very large quoted business. The organisation provides the majority of engineering, design and architectural resource for the ONAP open source project.

ONAP is a network virtualisation orchestration product used in the telco world, big telcos use this tool to meet their fluctuating network capacity requirements and to provide new services.

These companies will make a lot of money through using ONAP, a piece of open source software.

Are these telcos exploiting poor little AT&T? AT&T is neither poor nor little, it is doing this for a whole raft of sound commercial reasons: it gives the company control of the market, technical profile (kudos) and most importantly allows it to strongly influence the future direction of a key technology and how it is used.

In the insurance world we have OpenUnderwriter, an insurance distribution tool and Lemonade, the Home Insuretech company is debuting an open source insurance policy that it says all users can help shape.

In these examples open source is used to drive take-up and help cross borders. Lemonade specifically see the move both ways, to increase innovation with a large pool of contributors and increased customers through the improved perception of openness and trust in an industry that can be seen very much as a black box.

These motivations will be common for many of the open source development solutions out there, a lone person developing code for the betterment of humanity is no longer the norm. Its businesses deciding they want to develop software, software that is, on the surface free, but may result in revenue, for example through consultancy, it raises their profile, makes them look good and enables them to get really good talent to work for them.

If we take a look at insurance, it should be remembered that it is a high volume, small margin business; companies setting themselves up as a tech business on the other hand, will enable them to get a higher multiplier for any planned IPO and founder exit.

To think these organisations, or any software company using open source software, are exploiting the open source providers and they should be giving back to the community, is a misunderstanding of that community.

I would argue that a lot of companies do feedback changes, look at the thriving Drupal community, thriving due to contributions from developers working for web companies; employing a Drupal master gives a web agency credibility.

Therefore, I believe, its a nave perspective to think of an open source community as being vulnerable, creative types being exploited by big business.

Altus Bateman: dont hold nave perspectives about open source.

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Open source licence series - Altus: open source is big business, get used to it - ComputerWeekly.com

The CEO of open source cybersecurity startup Snyk, which is now valued at over $1 billion in less than five years, explains how it doubled its revenue…

Less than five years after it launched, cybersecurity company Snyk (which is pronounced "sneak" and stands for "so now you know") is valued at over $1 billion.

Today, many companies' applications are underpinned by open source software, or software that is free for anyone to use, download, and modify. Snyk builds tools that automatically scans the open source software to find and fix vulnerabilities.

On Tuesday, Snyk announced it raised $150 million in a round led by Stripes, just four months after it announced it closed a $70 million round in September. In total, Snyk has raised $250 million.

Snyk wasn't looking to raise money. The raise was prompted by VCs who wanted to invest proactively, says Snyk CEO Peter McKay.

Since the last round, McKay says that Snyk's annual recurring revenue has doubled. And from 2018 to 2019, its ARR has quadrupled as it won big customers like Google, Salesforce, Intuit, and Nordstrom.

"Our investors see that as a huge opportunity," McKay told Business Insider. "They see our momentum both in the community and customer traction and just the awareness on Snyk in the market."

McKay says Snyk has been able to double its ARR in the last four months because it works from the bottom up, by creating a community of developers who bring its software in-house to help them perform their jobs.

While Snyk helps make open source software more secure, its tools are not themselves free and open source, although the company's got a try-it-before-you buy it freemium tier. The interesting thing about Snyk is that it breaks the misconception that developers who are comfortable with free open-source software, or just whipping together a tool themselves aren't willing to pay for software tools. (That's one of the reasons Snyk was named by VCs as one of the 72 startups that will boom in 2020.)

"A lot of that has been driven from an aggressive shift, and more power, shifting to developers, not just in tech companies but all companies," McKay said. "The speed of your developing organization and the number of apps that you're building for your customers have increased significantly yet cybersecurity continues to be a big issue for all of them."

In fact, Snyk is doubling down on its plans to grow its community of users. It has a team that focuses on building its community and sharing information about security with them and McKay says the company hopes its education efforts will reach every developer worldwide.

Last June, Snyk acquired DevSecCon, a conference focused on development and security. Snyk says that this conference will become a big vehicle for it to build an even bigger developer community around its products and educate them about security.

Still, McKay says Snyk treats its business and community as two separate companies, as what's right for the business can be different from what's right for the community. On the community side, Snyk focuses on raising more awareness on security, compliance, and data protection, as well as providing developers access to the freemium version of its software.

For enterprise customers, Snyk focuses on building business features to help large teams collaborate better.

"As more and more of these companies move aggressively to digital first and become more and more of a software company, the importance of software and the increase in software risk is becoming significant," McKay said. "The only way to solve that problem in a way that doesn't slow you down, you've got to build it in the development lifecycle."

McKay says a big part of why VCs invested in his company was because it's been fiscally responsible and spends money prudently. He says Snyk still has most of the money from the last round in the bank.

"We spend it the right way, the right time, all the right metrics we're focused on," McKay said. "We don't want to lose the quality of the teams we hire, and don't want to lose maniacal focus on customer success. It's growing at a controlled pace."

Although McKay says Snyk didn't need to raise new funding, it saw this round as an opportunity to reach even larger goals. With the funding, Snyk plans to focus on building its products, expanding globally, and continuing to grow its community of over 400,000 developers.

"When you look at it, we thought this would be a way to expand our product roadmap faster," McKay said. "This would be a way to expand our community globally. This would be a way for us to expand our go-to-market at a faster pace then we were. The time is now and the market opportunity is there."

Now that Snyk's valuation has reached over a billion, McKay says its goal is to run its business like a public company.

"An acquisition could come out of anywhere, you never say never, but we don't plan on that. We focus on being a long term successful software company where you get to a point where you have the option of being public," McKay said.

Got a tip? Contact this reporter via email at rmchan@businessinsider.com, Signal at 646.376.6106,Telegram at @rosaliechan, orTwitter DM at @rosaliechan17. (PR pitches by email only, please.) Other types of secure messaging available upon request. Youcan alsocontact Business Insider securely via SecureDrop.

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The CEO of open source cybersecurity startup Snyk, which is now valued at over $1 billion in less than five years, explains how it doubled its revenue...

Alfresco and Tech Mahindra Introduce Four Jointly Developed AI/IoT Solutions for Insurance Companies – Yahoo Finance

Alfresco Software, an open source content, process and governance software company, and Tech Mahindra, a leading provider of digital transformation, consulting and re-engineering services and solutions, today announced collaboration on four jointly-developed, transformative insurance solutions. The collaboration combines Tech Mahindras insurance expertise and experience in the insurance industry with Alfrescos powerful Digital Business Platform to create solutions for risk management, automated underwriting, a self-learning chatbot, and intelligent claims handling.

Gautam Bhasin, Global Head - Banking, Financial Services and Insurance (BFSI), Tech Mahindra, said: "Insurance companies are constantly competing for new digital-native customers in order to gain more customers and create new revenue streams. To succeed, they have to reinvent their current offerings and offer modern solutions that appeal to both insurance policy holders and providers. Tech Mahindras collaboration with Alfresco, as part of our TechMNxt charter, has spawned four innovative applications that help insurance companies develop new products, optimize their current offerings, and provide customers with an enhanced experience."

Dineshkumar Shankarnarayan, Head Digital Experience Offerings, Tech Mahindra said: "Alfrescos cloud capabilities and digital business platform is synergistic with Tech Mahindras overall mission of serving the Digital Customer. Todays announcement represents the expansion of our partnership to bring innovative digital solutions for Insurance companies. We consider Alfresco to be one of our key partners in helping our customers transition seamlessly to cloud-based service by making applications more usable and enhancing their overall user experience."

Using the Alfresco Digital Business Platform as the cloud-native content management foundation (see IDC Technology spotlight: "Achieving Contextual and Value-Centric Customer Engagement in Insurance Through Connected Ecosystems"), Tech Mahindra is targeting insurance companies with the following four solutions that can help them reshape their operations and enable them to better serve their customers:

Jay Bhatt, Chief Executive Officer, Alfresco noted: "The transformative power of our advanced content, process, and governance platform enables insurance providers to achieve the full benefits of digitalization with real-time access to content wherever it resides and agile workflow development. This, in turn, will enable them to operate more efficiently, offer new services, stimulate growth, and decrease customer churn by helping their customers find the coverage most applicable and appealing to them."

About Tech Mahindra

Tech Mahindra represents the connected world, offering innovative and customer-centric information technology experiences, enabling Enterprises, Associates and the Society to Rise. We are a USD 4.9 billion company with 131,500+ professionals across 90 countries, helping 946 global customers including Fortune 500 companies. Our convergent, digital, design experiences, innovation platforms and reusable assets connect across a number of technologies to deliver tangible business value and experiences to our stakeholders. Tech Mahindra is the highest ranked Non-U.S. company in the Forbes Global Digital 100 list (2018) and in the Forbes Fab 50 companies in Asia (2018).

Tech Mahindra is part of the USD 21 billion Mahindra Group that employs more than 200,000 people in over 100 countries. The Group operates in the key industries that drive economic growth, enjoying a leadership position in tractors, utility vehicles, after-market, information technology and vacation ownership. Connect with us on http://www.techmahindra.com

About Alfresco

Alfresco Software, Inc. ("Alfresco") is a commercial, open source software company that builds and markets a cloud-native, process, content and governance intensive Digital Business Platform. It is a single, integrated platform built from the ground up by Alfresco and is used to digitize processes, manage content and securely govern information. Alfresco is used by more than 1,300 industry-leading organizations, including Cisco, Canadian Museum for Human Rights, Delta Dental, Liberty Mutual, LexisNexis, Pitney Bowes, the Joint Chiefs of Staff, NASA, RBC Capital Markets and the US Navy Department. Founded in 2005, Alfresco has its headquarters in Boston, Massachusetts, USA and operations in Atlanta, GA., Maidenhead and London, UK, and Sydney, Australia. For more information about Alfresco, please visit http://www.alfresco.com.

View source version on businesswire.com: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20200127005029/en/

Contacts

Sara KrypelAlfrescoUS@teamlewis.com 781-418-2422

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Alfresco and Tech Mahindra Introduce Four Jointly Developed AI/IoT Solutions for Insurance Companies - Yahoo Finance

Pilot projects for a Global Voting Platform and a Global Democracy Lab – Democracy Without Borders

The GVP: a new old internet tool for global democracy

Together with Democracy without Borders, the World Parliament Experiment has been working on a Global Voting Platform (GVP).

The GVP is an internet based tool for promoting global democracy which will be scalable from small numbers of participants to mass use at the global level. In a structured way it allows for creating initiatives, debating them and voting on them, with the option to delegate votes. The GVP is the successor to an internet tool implemented in the year 2000, and so builds on real-world experience.

In 2019, the programming of the GVP progressed to a stage that allowed for beta testing. A first phase with a focus on the main mechanisms was successfully completed identifying only minor bugs, and a second phase is still ongoing prior to the official launch.

In 2020, we plan to further develop the GVP under the motto generating political impact. These will be our next steps:

The GVP was used to support the World Parliament Experiments other project in 2019: the Global Democracy Lab (GDL). The GDL 2019 was a week-long leadership course for global democracy activists that took place from 21-25 October in Berlin. Participants from six countries gave positive feedback and shared good ideas for improving the format. The course was aimed at activists interested in using modern concepts of leadership, introduced by professional coaches, to be more effective in supporting the mission of Democracy without Borders.

During the lab, the GVP served as a learning and organizing tool for participants, and catalysed a discussion on how steps towards global democracy could be made workable.

We are planning a follow-up workshop on internet and democracy in April or May 2020 where we will invite experts to discuss challenges to internet governance, for example national internet shutdowns, and how free internet access and democracy-friendly internet usage can be supported by open source software, good data protection and data security, and potentially blockchain technology for decentralization and transparency. We also hope to generate ideas for using the GVP to promote global democracy, and what requirements it must meet to fulfil this purpose.

Also in 2020, there will be a second GDL that will integrate the results of the previous workshop with further ideas and concepts, such as the establishment of a GDL fellowship for committed and capable global democracy activists. We intend to link GDL and GVP more closely by using the GVP as the organizational platform for such a fellowship, preparing the next GDL event on the GVP, and feeding GDL content on future initiatives into the GVP for debate.

If this second GDL delivers good and measurable results for Democracy Without Borders, we will propose making the GDL a permanent DWB project a Global Democracy Academy.

To join our mailing list or to get involved in the above projects, please write to team@world-parliament.org. There are numerous options for creative contributions, and we look forward to hearing from you.

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Pilot projects for a Global Voting Platform and a Global Democracy Lab - Democracy Without Borders

What’s Going on with Julian Assange? Extradition Hearing of WikiLeaks Founder Due to Start in February – Newsweek

The extradition hearing of WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange will now be split into two parts and is not expected to conclude until around June this year.

The decision was made during a court session yesterday at the Westminster Magistrates' Court in London by Judge Vanessa Baraitser, after both sides said they needed more time to gather evidence and prepare arguments, Reuters reported. Assange appeared via video-link.

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The Australian leaker, 48, has been held inside the maximum security HM Prison Belmarsh in south-east London since his arrest in April last year.

The extradition hearing will now start on February 24 at London's Woolwich Crown Court and will go on for about a week. Proceedings will pick up again on May 18 and last for another three weeks.

The initial session will reportedly discuss claims that the prosecution has been politically motivated.

"The case will now go on for much longer than we thought," WikiLeaks editor Kristinn Hrafnsson, 57, said outside court Thursday, surrounded by banners and supporters of the organization.

"We have learned from submissions and affidavits presented by the United States to this court that they do not consider foreign nationals to have first amendment protection," he added.

"Let that sink in for a second. At the same time the U.S. government is chasing journalists all over the world, they claim they have extraterritorial reach. They have decided that all foreign journalists have no protection... this is not about Julian Assange. It's about press freedom."

Inside the court room at yesterday's hearing, Assange's legal representative, Edward Fitzgerald QC, complained that communications with his client have been limited by the prison service.

"We've had great difficulties in getting into Belmarsh to take instructions from Mr. Assange and to discuss the evidence with him,' he said. "We simply cannot get in as we require."

It was confirmed in May last year the U.S. Department of Justice would pursue 18 charges linked to what it called "one of the largest compromises of classified information in the history of the United States." A superseding indictment alleged Assange conspired with Chelsea Manning in "unlawfully obtaining and disclosing classified documents related to the national defense."

The charges may result in decades in prison. WikiLeaks said in an email yesterday that Assange faces "175 years prison for publishing truthful and accurate information in the public interest."

Assange was granted asylum by Ecuador in 2012 and remained in its London embassy for seven years, fighting allegations of sexual assault from Sweden which have since been dropped. He was dragged from the building in April last year as his protection was revoked.

The next month, Assange was sentenced to 50 weeks in prison for breaching bail conditions back in 2012a ruling described as "shocking" and "vindictive" by WikiLeaks' Twitter account.

WikiLeaks made both friends and enemies over the years by publishing documents from the U.S government and became a fixture in the 2016 U.S. presidential election after releasing troves of files and emails from the Democratic Party, some allegedly stolen by Russia-aligned hackers.

The U.S. noted that WikiLeaks obtained and published reports about the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, alongside Guantanamo Bay detainee briefs and Department of State cables.

In June last year, Massimo Moratti, Amnesty International's Deputy Director for Europe, called on the British government to fight back against the extradition request.

"The U.K. must abide by its obligations under international law that forbid the transfer of individuals to another country where they would face serious human rights violations," he said.

Roughly five months later, an open letter was sent to the U.K. Home Secretary from a collective dubbed "Doctors For Assange." It expressed concerns about Assange's physical and mental health and suggested the WikiLeaks founder would not be fit to stand trial next month.

The letter, posted to Medium, said: "Any medical treatment indicated should be administered in a properly equipped and expertly staffed university teaching hospital. Were such urgent assessment and treatment not to take place, we have real concerns, on the evidence currently available, that Mr. Assange could die in prison. The medical situation is thereby urgent. There is no time to lose."

In response, the U.K. Home Office said it rejected any suggestion of mistreatment and said that it was "committed to upholding the rule of law, and ensuring that no one is ever above it."

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What's Going on with Julian Assange? Extradition Hearing of WikiLeaks Founder Due to Start in February - Newsweek

Will Artificial Intelligence Be Humankinds Messiah or Overlord, Is It Truly Needed in Our Civilization – Science Times

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Definition of Artificial Intelligence

Contrary to whatartificial intelligenceis and what it does, the robots of Asimov are not here yet. But, AI exists in everyday tools that we use, and they exist as apps or anything that employs a simple algorithm to guide its functions. Humans exist comfortably because of our tools; the massive intelligence of computers is sitting on the edge of quantum-based technology too.

But, they are not terminator level threats or a virus that is multiplied hundreds of times, that hijacks AI but not yet. For human convenience, we see fit to create narrowAI (weak AI), or general AI (AGI or strong AI) as sub-typesmade to cater to human preferences. Between the two, weak AI can be good at a single task that is like factory robots. Though strong AI is very versatile, and used machine learning and algorithms which evolve like an infant to an older child. But, children grow and become better than

Why research AI safety?

For many AI means a lot and makes life better, or maybe a narrow AI can mix flavored drinks? The weight it has on every one of us is major, and we are on the verge of may come. Usually, AI is on the small-side of the utilitarian way it is used. Not a problem, as long as it is not something that controls everything relevant. It is not farfetched when weaponized it will be devastating and worse if the safety factor is unknown.

One thing to consider whether keeping weak AI as the type used, but humans need to check how it is doing.What if strong artificial intelligence is given the helmand gifted with advanced machine learning that has algorithms that aren't pattern-based. This now sets the stage for self-improvements and abilities surpassing humankind. How far will scientist hyper-intelligence machines do what it sees fit, or will ultra-smart artificial intelligence be the overlord, not a servant?

How can AI be dangerous?

Do machines feel emotions that often guide what humans do, whether good or bad and does the concepts of hate or love apply to heir algorithms or machine learning. If there is indeed a risk for such situations, here are two outcomes crucial to that development. One is AI that has algorithms, machine learning, and deep learning (ability to self-evolve) that sets everything on the train to self-destruction.

In order for artificial intelligence to deliver the mission, it will be highlyevolved and with no kill switch. To be effective in annihilating the enemy, designed will create hardened AI with blessings to be self-reliant and protects itself. Narrow AI will be countered easily and hacked easily.

Artificial intelligence can be gifted with benevolence that far exceeds the capacity of humans. It can turn sides ways if the algorithms, machine learning, and deep learning develop the goal. One the AI is just centered on the goal, lack of scruples or human-like algorithms will weaponize it again. Its evolving deep learning will the goal, view threats to be stopped which is us.

Conclusion

The use ofartificial intelligencewill benefit our civilization, but humans should never be mere fodder as machines learn more. We need AI but should be careful to consider the safety factors in developing them, or we might be at their heels.

Read: Benefits & Risks of Artificial Intelligence

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Will Artificial Intelligence Be Humankinds Messiah or Overlord, Is It Truly Needed in Our Civilization - Science Times

Use of Artificial Intelligence in the Supply Chain is Expected to Grow – Supply and Demand Chain Executive

A study, Global Artificial Intelligence (AI) in Supply Chain Market 2019, showcased current AI in supply chain market size, drivers, trends, opportunities, challenges and other segments. In addition, it also explains various definitions and classification of the artificial intelligence in supply chain industry, applications and chain structure.

In continuation of the data, the report covers various marketing strategies followed by key players and distributors, explaining AI in supply chain marketing channels, potential buyers and development history. The intent of global of the report is to depict the information to the user regarding AI in the supply chain market forecast and dynamics for upcoming years.

The report lists the essential elements that influence the growth of AI in the supply chain industry as well as wise and application wise consumption figures. In addition, the report sheds light on the technological evolution, tie-ups, acquisition, innovated business approaches and R&D statuses.

The Artificial Intelligence (AI) In Supply Chain study also incorporates new investment feasibility analysis of Artificial Intelligence (AI) In Supply Chain. Together with strategically analyzing the key micro markets, the report also focuses on industry-specific drivers, restraints, opportunities, and challenges in the Artificial Intelligence (AI) In Supply Chain market.

Moreover, the report organizes to provide essential information on current and future Artificial Intelligence (AI) In Supply Chain market movements, organizational needs and Artificial Intelligence (AI) In Supply Chain industrial innovations. Additionally, the complete Artificial Intelligence (AI) In Supply Chain report helps the new aspirants to inspect the forthcoming opportunities in the Artificial Intelligence (AI) In Supply Chain industry. Investors will get a clear idea of the dominant Artificial Intelligence (AI) In Supply Chain players and their future forecasts.

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Use of Artificial Intelligence in the Supply Chain is Expected to Grow - Supply and Demand Chain Executive