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---
title: "Open Source Software: 20-Plus Years of Innovation (LinuxInsider)"
date: 2018-10-29
categories:
- english
- article
tags:
- Community
headerimage:
src: open-source-blocks.jpg
summary: LinuxInsider published an article about 20+ years of innovation in the Open Source movement, featuring my perspectives on how collaborative development has transformed the technology landscape and the continuing influence of Open Source across industries from operating systems to enterprise software and cloud infrastructure.
article:
name: LinuxInsider
href: https://www.linuxinsider.com/story/85646.html
---
LinuxInsider published a retrospective on over two decades of innovation through Open Source software, featuring my insights on how collaborative development has fundamentally changed the technology industry from the early days of GNU and Linux through mainstream adoption in enterprise environments to modern success stories like Android, Kubernetes and other transformative projects.
The article covers key themes including the increasing participation of major corporations as active contributors to Open Source projects, the economic value of Open Source through services and ecosystems, and the outlook on new areas like AI/ML frameworks, IoT, Edge Computing and blockchain technologies where Open Source continues to drive innovation.
> The Free and Open Source movement has achieved successes probably no one dared to dream of when the free software movement began to take shape in the 1980s, noted Max Mehl, program manager of Free Software Foundation Europe.
>
> “Today, Free Software and Open Source are synonyms that are being used in almost every device — from remotes to washing machines, mobile phones to aircraft, and the International Space Station,” he told LinuxInsider.
>
> Large enterprises, even self-declared enemies of FOSS in the past, now recognize that the power of the community and the transparent processes benefit end users and encourage innovation, noted Mehl.
>
> “The concept of Free Software licenses and copyleft, once a legal hack, is universally accepted and legally confirmed, he added.
The full article offers a comprehensive perspective on the 2018 Open Source landscape and is available on [LinuxInsider](https://www.linuxinsider.com/story/85646.html).