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SODA Foundation Announces 2022 Data & Storage Trends Survey

To address evolving Data and Storage needs throughout the industry, SODA Foundation, in partnership with Linux Foundation Research, is once again conducting a survey to provide insights into challenges, gaps, and trends for data and storage in the era of cloud native, edge, AI, and 5G. The results will serve to guide the SODA Foundation technical direction and ecosystem. With this survey, we seek to answer:

What are the data & storage challenges faced by end users?What are the key trends shaping the data & storage industry?Which open source data & storage projects are users interested in?What cloud strategies are being adopted by businesses?

Through new insights generated from the data and storage community, end users will be better equipped to make decisions, vendors can improve their products, and the SODA Foundation can establish new technical directions — and beyond!

Please participate now; we intend to close the survey in August.

Privacy and confidentiality are important to us. Neither participant names, nor their company names, will be displayed in the final results. 

This survey should take no more than 15 minutes of your time. 

To take the 2022 SODA Foundation Data & Storage Trends Survey, click the button below in your choice of English, Chinese, and Japanese.

BONUS

As a thank you for participating in this research, once you have completed the survey, a code will be displayed on the confirmation page, which can be used for a 25% discount on any Linux Foundation training course or certification exam listed in our catalog: https://training.linuxfoundation.org/full-catalog/ 

PRIVACY

Your name and company name will not be displayed. Reviews are attributed to your role, company size, and industry. Responses will be subject to the Linux Foundation’s Privacy Policy, available at https://linuxfoundation.org/privacy. Please note that members of the SODA Foundation survey committee who are not LF employees will review the survey results. If you do not want them to have access to your name or email address in connection with the survey, please do not provide your name or email address.

VISIBILITY

We will summarize the survey data and share the learnings later this year on the SODA website. In addition, we will produce an in-depth survey report which will be shared with all survey participants.

ABOUT SODA FOUNDATION

The SODA Foundation is an open source project under the Linux Foundation that aims to foster an ecosystem of open source data management and storage software for data autonomy. SODA Foundation offers a neutral forum for cross-project collaboration and integration and provides end-users with quality end-to-end solutions. We intend to use this survey data to help guide the SODA Foundation and its surrounding ecosystem on important issues.

PARTNERS

We are grateful for the support of our many survey distribution partners, including:

China Electronics Standardization Institute (CESI)China Open Source Cloud League (COSCL)Chinese Software Developer Network (CSDN)Cloud Computing Innovation Council of India (CCICI)Cloud Native Computing Foundation (CNCF)Electronics For You (EFY)IEEE Bangalore SectionJapan Data Storage Forum (JDSF)Mulan ProjectOpen Infra Foundation (OIF)Storage Networking Industry Association (SNIA)

QUESTIONS

If you have questions regarding this survey, please email us at survey@sodafoundation.io or ask us on Slack at https://sodafoundation.io/slack/

Sign up for the SODA Newsletter at https://sodafoundation.io/

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Open Mainframe Project Announces Schedule for the 3rd Annual Open Mainframe Summit on September 21-21 in Philadelphia, PA

 The first-ever in-person Summit will focus on security, training, AI, Linux on Z and Cloud Native  and will be accessible online for attendees around the world

SAN FRANCISCO, July 13, 2022 The Open Mainframe Project, an open source initiative that enables collaboration across the mainframe community to develop shared tool sets and resources, announces the schedule for the 3rd annual Open Mainframe Summit, which will be in-person in Philadelphia, PA, and streaming online for global attendees. This year’s theme focuses on security, which is top of mind for every company that uses mainframes.

Critical enterprise systems are more connected than ever, which means vulnerabilities have increased. In fact, according to The Essential Holistic Security Strategy, a recent report by Forrester Consulting, commissioned by Open Mainframe Project Silver Member BMC, 81 percent of organizations surveyed are prioritizing the integration of security functions and improving security detection and response.

This year will highlight security as it relates to all aspects of mainframes and beyond including cloud native services, automation, software supply chain management and more. The Summit will also highlight projects such as Zowe and COBOL, education and training topics that will offer seasoned professionals, developers, students and thought leaders an opportunity to share best practices and network with like-minded individuals.

Some of the security sessions include:

Integrate the Mainframe into Your Broader IT Security Strategy – Misty Decker, Director of Product Marketing, Micro FocusSafe Cloud Native Services in the World of Zero Trust – Alan Clark, Member of the CTO Office, SUSEManaging Open Source Vulnerabilities on Mainframe – Emre Tunar, Director of Software Engineering – Mainframe Security, BroadcomA Framework to Automate Cybersecurity Controls and Regulatory Controls on IBM zSystems and LinuxOne environments – Pradeep Parameshwaran, Lead Architect, Security and Compliance on IBM Z and LinuxONE

Additionally, David Wheeler, Open Source Supply Chain Security Director at the Linux Foundation, will also give a keynote.  

Other highlights include:

Customer Success Stories Incorporating Zowe in Their z/OS Transformation and Modernization Journeys – Joe Winchester, Senior Technical Staff Member, IBMMeet the Future of COBOL – Hartanto Ario Widjaya, Singapore Management University; Caitlin Mooney, Student Mentor, New Jersey Institute of Technology; Jade Walker, ZDP Trainee, M&T Bank; and Angie Rositilia Mejia, Student, East Carolina UniversityThe New Workforce: Integrating the Next Generation with the Greatest Generation – Spencer Hallman, Lead Product Manager, BMCHow to Monitor and Manage Mainframe and Storage Performance Metrics Utilizing Voice and OpenSource Software Tools – Justin Santer, Application Developer and Software Engineer; Vincent Terrone, Senior Enterprise Solutions Architect;  John Wolfgang, Senior Storage Systems Architect; and Len Santalucia, CTO, Vicom Infinity, A Converge CompanyZowe Reaches Orbit, Now What Mission Control (keynote) – Peter Wassel, Director of Product Management, DevOps and Open Mainframe; George DeCandio, Chief Technology Officer; BroadcomDemystified: Put Your Web App on the Zowe Desktop in a Flash – Robert Blum, Senior Software Developer, Phoenix Software InternationalMainframe Open Education – Fostering the Stewardship of Education Resources – Lauren Valenti, Director of Mainframe Education and Customer Engagement, Broadcom and Viviane De Padua Diogo Sanches, Skill and Enablement Leader, Kyndryl

See the full conference schedule here.

Open Mainframe Project would like to thank this year’s Open Mainframe Summit planning committee including Alan Clark, CTO Office and Director for Industry Initiatives, Emerging Standards and Open Source at SUSE; Donna Hudi, Chief Marketing Officer at Phoenix Software; Elizabeth K. Joseph, Developer Advocate at IBM; and Michael Bauer, Staff Product Owner at Broadcom, Inc.

Early bird pricing ($500 US) for in-person attendees ends on July 15. Registration for academia is $50 for in-person and $15 for a virtual pass. Register here.

Open Mainframe Summit is made possible thanks to Platinum Sponsors Broadcom Mainframe Software, IBM, and SUSE and Gold Sponsors BMC, Micro Focus and Vicom Infinity, a Converge Company. For information on becoming an event sponsor, click here by August 5. 

Members of the press who would like to request a press pass to attend should contact Maemalynn Meanor at maemalynn@linuxfoundation.org.

About the Open Mainframe Project

The Open Mainframe Project is intended to serve as a focal point for deployment and use of Linux and Open Source in a mainframe computing environment. With a vision of Open Source on the Mainframe as the standard for enterprise class systems and applications, the project’s mission is to build community and adoption of Open Source on the mainframe by eliminating barriers to Open Source adoption on the mainframe, demonstrating value of the mainframe on technical and business levels, and strengthening collaboration points and resources for the community to thrive. Learn more about the project at https://www.openmainframeproject.org.

About The Linux Foundation

Founded in 2000, the Linux Foundation and its projects are supported by more than 2,950 members. The Linux Foundation is the world’s leading home for collaboration on open source software, hardware, standards, and data. Linux Foundation projects are critical to the world’s infrastructure including Linux, Kubernetes, Node.js, ONAP, Hyperledger, RISC-V, and more. The Linux Foundation’s methodology focuses on leveraging best practices and addressing the needs of contributors, users, and solution providers to create sustainable models for open collaboration. For more information, please visit us at linuxfoundation.org.

The Linux Foundation has registered trademarks and uses trademarks. For a list of trademarks of The Linux Foundation, please see its trademark usage page: www.linuxfoundation.org/trademark-usage. Linux is a registered trademark of Linus Torvalds.

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How to troubleshoot your network with Nmap

Learn how to use Nmap scans to check if systems are online and find problems in your network.

Read More at Enable Sysadmin

FDC3 2.0 Drives Desktop Interoperability Across the Financial Services Ecosystem

The Fintech Open Source Foundation builds on the success of FDC3, its most adopted open source project to date

New York, NY – July 13, 2022 – The Fintech Open Source Foundation (FINOS), the financial services umbrella of the Linux Foundation, announced today during its Open Source in Finance Forum (OSFF) London the launch of FDC3 2.0. FDC3 supports efficient, streamlined desktop interoperability between financial institutions with enhanced connectivity capabilities. 

The global FDC3 community is fast-growing and includes application vendors, container vendors, a large presence from sell-side firms and a growing participation from buy-side firms all collaborating together on advancing the standard. 

You can check out all the community activity here: http://fdc3.finos.org/community

The latest version of the standard delivers universal connectivity to the financial industry’s desktop applications with a significant evolution of all four parts of the Standard: the Desktop Agent API, the App Directory providing access to apps and the intent and context messages that they exchange. 

MAIN IMPROVEMENTS

FDC3 2.0 significantly streamlines the API for both app developers and desktop agent vendors alike, refining the contract between these two groups based on the last three years’ working with FDC3 1.x. 
Desktop agents now support two-way data-flow between apps (both single transactions and data feeds), working with specific instances of apps and providing metadata on the source of messages – through an API that has been refined through feedback from across the FDC3 community.
This updated version also redefines the concept of the “App Directory”, simplifying the API, greatly improving the App Record and the discoverability experience for users and making the App Directory fit-for-purpose for years to come (and the explosion of vendor interest FDC3 is currently experiencing).
Finally, FDC3 2.0 includes a host of new standard intents and context, which define and standardize message exchanges for a range of very common workflows, including interop with CRMs, Communication apps (emails, calls, chats), data visualization tools, research apps and OMS/EMS/IMS systems. This is one of the most exciting developments as it represents diverse parts of the financial services software industry working together through the standard.

MAIN USES

Help Manage Information Overload. Finance is an information-dense environment. Typically, traders will use several different displays so that they can keep track of multiple information sources at once. FDC3 helps with this by sharing the “context” between multiple applications, so that they collectively track the topic the user is focused on.
Work Faster. FDC3 standardizes a way to call actions and exchange data between applications (called “intents”). Applications can contribute intents to each other, extending each other’s functionality. Instead of the user copy-and-pasting bits of data from one application to another, FDC3 makes sure the intents have the data they need to seamlessly transition activity between applications.

Platform-Agnostic. As an open standard, FDC3 can be implemented on any platform and in any language. All that is required is a “desktop agent” that supports the FDC3 standard, which is responsible for coordinating application interactions. FDC3 is successfully running on Web and Native platforms in financial institutions around the world.

End the integration nightmare. By providing support for FDC3, vendors and financial organizations alike can avoid the bilateral or trilateral integration projects that plague desktop app roll-out, cause vendor lock-in and result in a slow pace of change on the Financial Services desktop.

“It is very rewarding to see the recent community growth around FDC3,” said Jane Gavronsky, CTO of FINOS. “More and more diverse participants in the financial services ecosystem recognize the key role a standard such as FDC3 plays for achieving a true open financial services ecosystem. We are really excited about FDC3 2.0 and the potential for creating concrete, business-driven use cases that it enables.” 

What this means for the community 

“The wide adoption of the FDC3 standard shows the relevance of the work being conducted by FINOS. At Symphony we are supporters and promoters of this standard. This latest version, FDC3 2.0, and its improvements demonstrate substantial progress in this work and its growing importance to the financial services industry,” said Brad Levy, Symphony CEO.

“The improvements to the App Directory and its ramifications for market participants and vendors are game-changing enough in themselves to demand attention from everyone: large sell-sides with large IT departments, slim asset managers who rely on vendor technology, and vendors themselves”, said Jim Bunting, Global Head of Partnerships, Cosaic.

“FDC3 2.0 delivers many useful additions for software vendors and financial institutions alike. Glue42 continues to offer full support for FDC3 in its products. For me, the continued growth of the FDC3 community is the most exciting development”, said Leslie Spiro, CEO, Tik42/Glue42. “For example recent contributions led by Symphony, SinglePoint and others have helped to extend the common data contexts to cover chat and contacts; this makes FDC3 even more relevant and strengthens our founding goal of interop ‘without requiring prior knowledge between apps”. 

“Citi is a big supporter of FDC3 as it has allowed us to simplify how we create streamlined intelligent internal workflows, and partner with strategic clients to improve their overall experience by integrating each other’s services. The new FDC3 standard opens up even more opportunities for innovation between Citi and our clients,” said Amit Rai, Technology Head of Markets Digital & Enterprise Portal Framework at Citi.

“FDC3 has allowed us to build interoperability within our internal application ecosystem in a way that will allow us to do the same with external applications as they start to incorporate these standards,” said Bhupesh Vora, European Head of Capital Markets Technology, Royal Bank of Canada. “The next evolution of FDC3 will ensure we continue to build richer context sharing capabilities with our internal applications and bring greater functionality to our strategic clients through integration with the financial application ecosystem for a more cohesive experience overall.”

“Interoperability allows the Trading team to take control of their workflows, allowing them to reduce the time it takes to get to market. In addition they are able to generate alpha by being able to quickly sort vast, multiple sources of data,” said Carl James, Global Head of Fixed Income Trading, Pictet Asset Management. 

As FINOS sees continued growth and contribution to the FDC3 standard, the implementation of FDC3 2.0 will allow more leading financial institutions to take advantage of enhanced desktop interoperability. The contribution of continued updates also represents the overall wider adoption of open source technology, as reported in last year’s 2021 State of Open Source in Financial Services annual survey. To get involved in this year’s survey, visit https://www.research.net/r/ZN7JCDR to share key insights into the ever-growing open source landscape in financial services. 

Skill up on FDC3 by taking the free Linux Foundation’s FDC3 training course, or contact us at https://www.finos.org/contact-us. Hear from Kris West, Principal Engineer at Cosaic and Lead Maintainer of FDC3 on the FINOS Open Source in Finance Podcast, where he discusses why it was important to change the FDC3 standard in order to keep up with the growing amount of use cases end users are contributing to the community.

About FINOS

FINOS (The Fintech Open Source Foundation) is a nonprofit whose mission is to foster adoption of open source, open standards and collaborative software development practices in financial services. It is the center for open source developers and the financial services industry to build new technology projects that have a lasting impact on business operations. As a regulatory compliant platform, the foundation enables developers from these competing organizations to collaborate on projects with a strong propensity for mutualization. It has enabled codebase contributions from both the buy- and sell-side firms and counts over 50 major financial institutions, fintechs and technology consultancies as part of its membership. FINOS is also part of the Linux Foundation, the largest shared technology organization in the world.

The post FDC3 2.0 Drives Desktop Interoperability Across the Financial Services Ecosystem appeared first on Linux Foundation.

Enabling Open Source Projects with Impactful Engineering Experience

This post originally appeared on the FINOS Community Blog. The author, James McLeod, is the Director of Community at the Fintech Open Source Foundation, a project of the Linux Foundation. You may also want to listen to the Open Source in Finance podcast

I often talk about “engineering experience” and the importance for open source projects to provide fast, easy and impactful ways for open source consumers to realise return on engagement. Just like e-commerce stores that invest in user experience to encourage repeat sales, successful open source projects provide a slick installation, well written contextual documentation and a very compelling engagement model that encourages collaboration.

In fact, within the open source community, it’s possible to drive commitment to open source projects through “engineering experience”. Successful projects develop lives of their own and build communities of thousands that flock to repos, Meetups and in-person events.

This article is focused on the “engineering experience” related to automation and deployment, but future articles will also cover providing an engaging README.md, contextual documentation and the workflows needed to engage new and experienced open source contributors.

ENGINEERING EXPERIENCE PROVIDES DAY ZERO OPEN SOURCE VALUE

The risk of ignoring an open source project’s “engineering experience” is the project becoming a lifeless repository waiting for a community to discover them. Imagine the questions that have been answered in dormant repos that could be solving real world problems if engagement was easy.

At FINOS we’re driven to provide day zero value to financial services engineers looking to utilise FINOS open source projects. This philosophy is demonstrated by FINOS projects like LegendWaltzPerspective and FDC3 that engage in open source methodologies for ease of installation.

Without engaging in a healthy “engineering experience”, engineer teams might find themselves working through reams of documentation, setting flags and system settings that could take days to configure and test against each and every operating system on their route to production.

The scenario highlighted above has been mitigated by FINOS projects Legend and Waltz by using Juju and Charms, an open source framework that enables easy installation and automated operations across hybrid cloud environments. Without Juju and Charms, Legend and Waltz would need to be manually installed and configured for every single project instance.

By engaging Juju and Charms, Legend and Waltz are shipped using a method that enables the projects to be installed across the software development lifecycle. This accelerator provides a positive “engineering experience” whilst increasing engineering velocity and saving development and infrastructure costs.

From the very first point of contact, open source projects should be smooth and simple to understand, install, deploy and leverage. The first set of people an open source project will meet on its journey to success is the humble developer looking for tools to accelerate projects.

Hybrid cloud and containerisation is a powerful example of how projects should be presented to engineers to vastly improve end-to-end engineering experience, another is the entire node.js and JavaScript ecosystem.

ENGINEERING EXPERIENCE ENABLES NODE.JS AND JAVASCRIPT OPEN SOURCE DEVELOPMENT

Take node.js and the various ways the node ecosystem can be maintained. I’m a massive fan of Node Version Manager, an open source project that enables the node community to install and traverse versions of node from a simple and easy to engage command line tool.

Node Version Manager removes the requirement to install, uninstall and reinstall different versions of node on your computer from downloaded binaries. Node Version Manager runs on your local computer and manages the version of node needed with simple bash commands.

After installing nvm with a simple curl of the latest install.sh, Node Version Manager is now running on your local computer, Mac in my case, and node can be installed with nvm install node. Such a simple way to keep the node.js community engaged, updated and supported. Not only this, but the vast open source world of JavaScript can now be leveraged.

With Node Version Manager provided as an open source tool, the further “engineering experience” of yarn and npm can be explored. Which enables FINOS projects, like Perspective and FDC3, to be installed using node.js to accelerate the financial services industry with simple commands like yarn add @finos/perspective and yarn add @finos/fdc3.

The chaining together of “engineering experience”, that removes the pain of manual configuration by leveraging containers and command line automation, not only invites experimentation, but it’s contributed greatly to the exponential success of open source itself.

As the articles move through the different ways to engage open source communities to make open source projects successful, it would be great to hear your “engineering experience” experiences by emailing james.mcleod@finos.org or by raising a GitHub issue on the FINOS Community Repo.

The post Enabling Open Source Projects with Impactful Engineering Experience appeared first on Linux Foundation.

The Linux Foundation Announces Conference Schedule for Open Source Summit Europe 2022

The premier event in Europe for open source code and community contributors features 200+ sessions across 13 micro-conferences, covering the pivotal topics and technologies at the core of open source.

SAN FRANCISCO, July 12, 2022 —  The Linux Foundation, the nonprofit organization enabling mass innovation through open source, today announced the full schedule for Open Source Summit Europe, the leading conference for open source developers, technologists, and community leaders. The event is taking place September 13-16 in Dublin, Ireland and virtually. The schedule can be viewed here.

OS Summit Europe will feature a robust program of 325+ talks across 13 micro-conferences covering the most essential and cutting edge topics in open source: Linux Systems, Supply Chain Security, AI + Data, OSPOs, Community Leadership, Embedded IoT, Cloud, Diversity, Containers, Embedded Linux and more.

2022 Conference Session Highlights Include:

LinuxConContainers as an Illusion – Michael Kerrisk, man7.orgHow to Report Your Linux Kernel Bug – Thorsten Leemhuis
Embedded Linux ConferenceBooting Automotive ECUs Really Fast with Modern Security Features – Brendan Le Foll, BMW Car IT GmbHFrom a Security Expert’s Diary: DOs and DON’Ts when Choosing Software for Your Next Embedded Product – Marta Rybczynska, Syslinbit
CloudOpenAddressing the Transaction Challenge in a Cloud-native World – Grace Jansen, IBMThe Challenges and Solutions of Open Edge Infrastructures – Ildiko Vancsa, Open Infrastructure Foundation
OSPOConBuilding a Team for the Upstream: Things We Learned Building InnerSource Teams for Open Source Impact – Emma Irwin, MicrosoftA Practical Guide for Outbound Open Source – Which Scales and Can Be Adapted Easily for Companies of Different Size – Oliver Fendt, Siemens AG
Critical Software SummitThe Unexpected Demise of Open Source Libraries – Liran Tal, SnykAddress Space Isolation for Enhanced Safety of the Linux Kernel – Igor Stoppa, NVIDIA
Emerging OS ForumDemystifying the WASM Landscape: A Primer – Divya Mohan, SUSEHow Open Source Helps a Grid Operator with the Challenges of the Energy Transition – Jonas van den Bogaard & Nico Rikken, Alliander
SupplyChainSecurityConComposing the Ultimate SBOM – Ivana Atanasova & Velichka Atanasova, VMwareFrom Kubernetes With Open Tools For Open, Secure Supply Chains – Adolfo García Veytia, Chainguard
Diversity Empowerment SummitOvercoming Imposter Syndrome to Become a Conference Speaker! – Dawn Foster, VMwareTeaching Collaboration to the Next Generation of Open Source Contributors – Ruth Suehle, Red Hat
Open Source On-RampDebugging Embedded Linux – Marta Rybczynska, SyslinbitGetting Started with Kernel-based Virtual Machine (KVM) – Leonard Sheng Sheng Lee, Computas
Open AI + Data Forum Beyond Neural Search: Hands-on Tutorial on Building Cross-Modal/Multi-Modal Solution with Jina AI – Han Xiao & Sami Jaghouar, Jina AITruly Open Lineage – Mandy Chessell, Pragmatic Data Research Ltd
ContainerConEvaluation of OSS Options to Build Container Images – Matthias Haeussler, NovatecInteractive Debugging of Dockerfile With Buildg – Kohei Tokunaga, NTT Corporation
Community Leadership ConferencePanel Discussion: Growing Open Source in the Irish Government – Clare Dillon, Open Ireland Network; Tony Shannon, Department of Public Expenditure & Reform in Government of Ireland; Tim Willoughby, An Garda Síochána, Ireland’s Police Service; Gar Mac Criosta, Linux Foundation Public Health; John Concannon, Department of Foreign AffairsDev Team Metrics that Matter – Avishag Sahar, LinearB
Embedded IoT Summit Design of an Open Source, Modular, 5G Capable, Container Based, Scientific Data Capture Hexacopter – Mauro Borrageiro & Ngoni Mombeshora, University of Cape TownContributing to Zephyr vs (Linux and U-boot) – Parthiban Nallathambi, Linumiz

Keynote speakers will be announced in the coming weeks. 

Registration (in-person) is offered at the early price of $850 through July 17. Registration to attend virtually is $25. Members of The Linux Foundation receive a 20 percent discount off registration and can contact events@linuxfoundation.org to request a member discount code. 

Applications for diversity and need-based scholarships are currently being accepted. For information on eligibility and how to apply, please click here. The Linux Foundation’s Travel Fund is also accepting applications, with the goal of enabling open source developers and community members to attend events that they would otherwise be unable to attend due to a lack of funding. To learn more and apply, please click here.

Health and Safety
In-person attendees will be required to be fully vaccinated against the COVID-19 virus and will need to comply with all on-site health measures, in accordance with The Linux Foundation Code of Conduct. To learn more, visit the Health & Safety webpage.

Event Sponsors
Open Source Summit Europe 2022 is made possible thanks to our sponsors, including Diamond Sponsors: AWS, Google and IBM, Platinum Sponsors: Huawei and Intel, and Gold Sponsors: Cloud Native Computing Foundation, Codethink, Docker, Mend, Red Hat, and Styra. For information on becoming an event sponsor, click here or email us.

Press
Members of the press who would like to request a press pass to attend should contact Kristin O’Connell.

ABOUT THE LINUX FOUNDATION
Founded in 2000, the Linux Foundation and its projects are supported by more than 2,950 members. The Linux Foundation is the world’s leading home for collaboration on open source software, hardware, standards, and data. Linux Foundation projects are critical to the world’s infrastructure including Linux, Kubernetes, Node.js, ONAP, Hyperledger, RISC-V, and more. The Linux Foundation’s methodology focuses on leveraging best practices and addressing the needs of contributors, users, and solution providers to create sustainable models for open collaboration. For more information, please visit us at https://linuxfoundation.org/

The Linux Foundation Events are where the world’s leading technologists meet, collaborate, learn and network in order to advance innovations that support the world’s largest shared technologies.

Visit our website and follow us on Twitter, LinkedIn, and Facebook for all the latest event updates and announcements.

The Linux Foundation has registered trademarks and uses trademarks. For a list of trademarks of The Linux Foundation, please see its trademark usage page: www.linuxfoundation.org/trademark-usage. Linux is a registered trademark of Linus Torvalds. 

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Media Contact

Kristin O’Connell
The Linux Foundation
koconnell@linuxfoundation.org

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10th Annual Jobs Report: Skill up for the summer and your next open source gig

For those of us in the northern hemisphere, summer is finally here! Perhaps you celebrated the Summer Solstice a few weeks ago. If you’re from the United States, the fireworks from the 4th of July are now just a fun memory.

Like me, you’re now probably thinking about how you’re going to spend your downtime this summer. Perhaps you plan on taking things easy, maybe finishing off that novel you never got to this year, or taking a road trip?

Well, it’s time to quit slacking, penguin. With the news of layoffs and inflation, and investment market declines taking the wind out of summer sailboats, there’s no better time than now to skill up for your next job, or to stay up-to-date on your current one. The good news is that there are great resources to help stay competitive during uncertain market times, and just in time for summer, too!

Linux Foundation Research and LF Training & Certification recently published its latest paper, the 10th Annual Open Source Jobs Report. While it’s not your usual beach reading material, the conclusions are timely and significant, so you should pay close attention.

One of the key takeaways was this: open source professionals seek satisfying employment with plenty of opportunities to develop skills. Unsurprisingly, they want to work in a pleasant and collaborative atmosphere, with a competent staff that is equally enthusiastic about their chosen field. If you’re highly skilled, maybe now’s a good time to ask for a raise?

And the folks that want to fill those jobs, the hiring managers? They’re seeking the brightest talent to fill open positions. They want individuals who are not only qualified but also a good match for their business culture. And guess what. There are not enough people with the necessary skills.

So what does this mean for open source professionals? Training and certifications can give you that extra edge when looking for that new position and potentially command a higher salary in your current job.

FINOS Announces 2022 State of Open Source in Financial Services Survey

FINOS, the fintech open source foundation, and its research partners, Linux Foundation Research, GitHub, Intel, Mend, Red Hat, Scott Logic, SUSE, Symphony, Tradeweb, and Wipro, are conducting its second annual survey as part of its ongoing research on the state of open source adoption, contribution, and readiness in the financial services industry. 

The increased prevalence, importance, and value of open source is well understood and widely reported by many industry surveys and studies. However, the rate at which different industries acknowledge this shift and adapt their working practices to capitalize on the new world of open source-first differs considerably.

The financial services industry has been a long-time consumer of open source software; however, many are struggling in contributing to and publishing open source software and standards and adopting open source methodologies. A lack of understanding of building and deploying efficient tooling and governance models is often seen as a limiting factor.

This survey and report seek to explore open source within the context of financial services organizations, including banks, asset managers, and hedge funds but it is designed as a resource to be used by all financial services organizations as an annual tracking of metrics. 

Please participate now; we intend to close the survey in early August. Privacy and confidentiality are important to us. Neither participant names, nor their company names, will be published in the final results.

To take the 2022 FINOS Survey, click the button below:

BONUS

As a thank-you for completing this survey, you will receive a 25% discount code on enrollment in any course in the Linux Foundation Training catalog.

PRIVACY

Your name and company name will not be published. Reviews are attributed to your role, company size, and industry. Responses will be subject to the Linux Foundation’s Privacy Policy, available at https://linuxfoundation.org/privacy. Please note that survey partners who are not Linux Foundation employees will be involved in reviewing the survey results. If you do not want them to have access to your name or email address, please do not provide this information.

VISIBILITY

We will summarize the survey data and share the findings during Open Source Strategy Forum, 2022. The summary report will be published on the FINOS and Linux Foundation websites. 

QUESTIONS

If you have questions regarding this survey, please email us at info@finos.org

The post FINOS Announces 2022 State of Open Source in Financial Services Survey appeared first on Linux Foundation.

How to configure a firewall on Linux with firewalld

Learn how to install, configure, and use firewalld to restrict or allow a computer’s access to services, ports, networks, subnets, and IP addresses.

Read More at Enable Sysadmin

Hendrick and Jarvis Talk Software Security

While open source software is ubiquitous and generally regarded as being secure, software development practices vary widely across projects regarding application development practices, protocols to respond to defects, or lack of standardized selection criteria to determine which software components are more likely to be secure. Consequently, software supply chains are vulnerable to attack, with implications and challenges for open source project communities. 

To help improve the state of software supply chain security, the Linux Foundation, the Open Source Security Foundation (OpenSSF), Snyk, the Eclipse Foundation, CNCF, and CI/CD Foundation conducted research and released the findings in the report, Addressing Cybersecurity Challenges in Open Source Software, during the 2022 Open Source Summit North America. 

At the Summit, Stephen Hendrick, LF’s Vice President of Research, and Matt Jarvis, Director of Developer Relations at Snyk, sat down with Alan Shimel of TechStrong TV to discuss the findings and next steps. Here are some key takeaways:

Alan: “ I think we’re always disappointed when we do the surveys that we find out, you know, beyond the lip service that gets paid to security, what actually is going on under the covers, and we’re always wishing for and hoping for more. That being said, I don’t want to be pessimistic. I am of the glass half full opinion that we are doing better and more security now than we probably ever have done.”

Stephen: “On the issue of, do organizations have an open source security policy. What we found was 49% said they had one, that’s good. 34% did not. And 17% said they don’t know.”

Matt: “In larger enterprises… you’ve got that kind of ingrained culture over a long time in terms of security and about how you consume software. . . the hardest problem in security isn’t really about technology at all. It’s always about people and culture. . . We’ve got two kinds of things happening in almost a perfect storm. At the same time, we’ve got this massive rise in supply chain attacks on open source, because, you know, it’s a victim of its own success. And attackers have realized it’s a lot easier to get into the supply chain than it is to find zero days in end user applications. So you’ve got that going on, where all of a sudden, folks are going, well, everything we do is based on open source, like, what do I do about security? And then, as Steve pointed out, you’ve got this, this ongoing, massive transformation of how we develop software, you know, this superfast high velocity.”

Stephen: “We asked. . . how do you intend to improve on the situation?. . . Top of the list was organizations are looking for more intelligent tools. . .  That was at 59%. . . Right behind that at 52% was a strong desire to understand and essentially codify best practices for how to do secure software development”

Matt: “Culture change is such a big part of how you make that transition from your kind of old school, security as gatekeeper kind of function, to this thing, where we put it to the developers, because the developers are the ones who, you know, you fix it at the developer eyeball before it’s got anywhere near production. That is the cheapest.”

Stephen: “You know, I did a report last year on SBOMs. And I gotta tell you that factors right into this. . . we did some stats in this survey on dependencies, you know, both direct and transitive, and found, really, sort of low levels of strong, strong security around organizations understanding the security posture of all these different dependencies and dependencies of dependencies. Really low numbers there. SBOMs would go so far in helping sort all that out.

“They’re going to give you knowledge about the metadata, it’s gonna give you usability, so you know that you’re licensed to use the stuff, and it’s going to know if it was good, if you trust that not only what you’re looking at for metadata is not falsified, but also understanding quite clearly, you know, what’s been fixed, what hasn’t been fixed from a vulnerability standpoint.”

Matt: “I think when people think about policies, they think, Oh, this needs to be like a 100 page document of some kind, you know, then it becomes overwhelming, but really a policy can be a one liner.”

Watch the full interview and read the transcript below.