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New FAQ: Frequent Misunderstandings of OSS Licenses

By News

The OpenChain Japan work group has released a new revision of its FAQ regarding frequent misunderstandings around open source licenses. This FAQ is available in English and Japanese, and assistance in translating it into other languages is very welcome.

It is important to note that this document is based on real world experiences distilled into very practical knowledge. We are fortunate to have had many companies contribute to it, and it holds great potential to assist the supply chain.

You can get over on GitHub

https://github.com/OpenChain-Project/OpenChain-JWG/tree/master/Education_Material/FAQ

Contributions and improvements are very welcome both on GitHub or through email.

Japan Work Group: New Series in ITMedia

By News

The OpenChain Japan Work Group has collaborated with ITMedia Inc. to produce a new series of articles covering open source and issues around compliance. The first article, by Endo San of Toyota, covers the strategic use of open source and legal risks involved in the enterprise space. OpenChain ISO/IEC 5230, SPDX ISO/IEC 5962 and other LF initiatives like OpenSSF feature heavily.

Check It Out (Japanese)

Onward Security Is the Latest Official OpenChain Project Partner

By Featured, News

OpenChain ISO/IEC 5230:2020 has a positive and active relationship with the security sector. Onward Security is our latest official partner and will bolster this part of our ecosystem support.

“Most IoT devices are developed with open source software, and the lack of security by design during product development and the integration of vulnerable third-party OSS into IoT devices are potentially fatal problems. Onward Security is pleased to partner with OpenChain to assist with ISO/IEC 5230 compliance assessment by offering HERCULES SecSAM, a Security Assessment Management platform, as well as security compliance services,” said Morgan Hung, General Manager of Onward Security.

“The OpenChain Project released a Security Assurance Reference Guide in August to address market demand. While our ISO/IEC standard is focused on open source license compliance, the inflection points it identifies are equally application to successful security process management,” says Shane Coughlan, OpenChain General Manager. “Our new relationship with Onward Security is another part of the larger picture to ensure every company, in every sector, of every size can get the information and support they need to excel.”

About Onward Security

Onward Security is a leading brand in cybersecurity compliance solutions for the Internet of Things. It has been selected as Best Cybersecurity Company – Asia Gold Winner by Cyber Security Excellence Awards. In addition to possessing an international IoT cybersecurity testing lab, it develops automated security assessment products with AI and machine learning features. It has been dedicating to helping customers in IoT/IIoT equipment manufacturing, finance, telecom, and other industries for fast obtaining security certification and effectively managing risks and vulnerabilities of open source software to ensure cyber and product security.

The Institute of Software of the Chinese Academy of Sciences is the Second Third Party Certifier in China

By Featured, News

The Institute of Software of the Chinese Academy of Sciences (ISCAS) joins the OpenChain Partner Program as the second official OpenChain Third Party Certifier in China. This dramatically expands the services available to companies of all sizes in the region and beyond.

“China is the single most important market in the global supply chain, and we are proud to start the year with a significant announcement underlying our progress in this region,” says Shane Coughlan, OpenChain General Manager. “Two key goals for China will be continuing to grow our local community of user companies, and continuing to ensure that the infrastructure to support their work continually improves. ISCAS is a partner we are delighted to work with in this regard.”

About ISCAS

Founded on March 1, 1985, the Institute of Software of the Chinese Academy of Sciences (hereinafter ISCAS) is a comprehensive research institute dedicated to the research and development of computer science theory and high and new technology of software.

ISCAS has computer science, computer software, computer application technology, and information security as the key disciplines. The discipline directions are computer science and software theory, basic software technology and systems, theories, methods and technologies of Internet information processing, and comprehensive information system technology.

ISCAS has actively participated in local and international exchanges and cooperation, established extensive scientific and technological exchanges and cooperation with many domestic provinces and cities, and more than 40 countries and regions such as the United States, Europe, Japan and Australia, and established branches in Guangzhou, Guiyang, Qingdao, Nanjing and other places.

Chinese Information Processing Society of China, the Algorithm Professional Committee of Chinese Association for Cryptologic Research, and the Software Definition Promotion Committee of Chinese Institute of Electronics are affiliated with ISCAS. The academic journals sponsored by the Institute include Journal of SoftwareJournal of Chinese Information ProcessingComputer Systems & Applications, and International Journal of Software and Informatics.

Over the past 30 years since its establishment, especially since it entered the pilot project of knowledge innovation of Chinese Academy of Sciences, ISCAS has achieved fruitful results in the field of computer science and software, and won 49 achievements at or above the academy, provincial and ministerial level (only the first completing organization is counted), including 1 first prize, 2 second prizes and 1 third prize of the National Natural Science Award; 9 second prizes and 2 third prizes of the National Science and Technology Progress Award. It is particularly worth mentioning that the first National Natural Science Award in the field of computer science came from the Institute of Software.

OpenChain in 2022

By Featured, News

The OpenChain Project and the OpenChain ISO/IEC 5230:2020 international standard had an exceptional 2021. From conformance announcements to new members, it was clear that the market was ready to gather around a shared solution for effective, efficient use of open source in supply chains.

The question is “what next?”

The answer is “a lot.”

We have three new governing board members to announce, new certifiers, new partners, new conformant organizations and – perhaps most important for the long-term – deeper engagement on the policy level across multiple countries.

As a member of our community you can expect to continue receiving support from global and national work groups, ever improving material to help with the adoption and use of OpenChain ISO/IEC 5230:2020, and to be kept up-to-date on everything important in the compliance sphere via our webinars.

From a strategic perspective we are executing on the vision shared at the beginning of 2021: to scale engagement from thousands to tens of thousands of companies. With recent developments regarding open source, security and supply chain management the necessity of this is ever more clear.

There are three things to watch for in Q1 2022:

  • The new board member announcements and their implications for geographies and sectors,
  • Updated materials for suppliers to make OpenChain ISO/IEC 5230:2020 even easier,
  • Announcements regarding how we will work even more closely with others in the compliance and security domain.

Thank you for all your support in 2021. I look forward to collaborating with you to make 2022 another milestone in our field.

OpenChain Person of the Year: Mark Gisi

By Featured, News

As we head into the holiday season I wanted to take a moment and thank everyone for an exceptional year. The OpenChain Project has accomplished incredible things, from altering the status quo in the tooling landscape (and making it better) through to preparing our first online training course. Too many people to count assisted in this process. However, I wanted to give special thanks and acknowledgement to Mark Gisi, chairperson of the Specification Work Group. This year he lead an effort to conclusively bridge the gap between OpenChain ISO/IEC 5230 and the security domain. 

This work was far more than speculative: companies around the world began using our ISO/IEC standard to accomplish security goals, especially in light of recent international developments. The situation was both supported and challenged by the market reality of deployment before full community cohesion. For large companies this is never a serious concern, but for small companies trying to get up-to-speed it is our job (and our pleasure) to make sure they can match their peers, their suppliers and their customers as soon as possible.

Mark took this all in his stride and coordinated a multi-month effort with exceptional consensus to produce our Security Assurance Reference Guide in August. Since that date the guide has been available to all parties for review, and Mark further shepherded feedback from that review to determine if updates were needed in the near term. They were not, because you all hit it out of the ballpark, and we got this artifact to market at precisely the right time to address topics like the US Executive Order.

Mark, thank you.

Now, Mark is far from the only person who has done exceptional things. I want to particularly thank Balakrishna for shepherding our first online training course (with certification) through reviews by many, many parties. We go live on the 16th December, tomorrow, and change the market in that direction. The course, of course, is free. I also want to thank Oliver, who has been running the OpenChain Reference Tooling Work Group on a breathtaking schedule of bi-weekly meetings. The sheer amount of information collected and experience shared eclipses anything done before in that domain. And finally in this list (but not in terms of amazing contribution), I want to thank Max for running the OpenChain Automation Case Study, which took all the ingredients around the world, and showed how to make them turnkey, how to many them work in the supply chain, and how to contextualize it as business intelligence.

Shane Coughlan
OpenChain General Manager

The Open Compliance Summit 2021 Awards

By Featured, News

The Open Compliance Summit had an excellent collection of speakers and participants for 2021. Continuing our tradition of recognizing some of the work done throughout the previous 12 months, we announced the following awards. Everyone here has contributed to making open source compliance faster, easier and more effective, and they have done a lot to make sure great compliance is available for every company of any size around the world.

We also awarded David Marr (Qualcomm) with a special award to recognize his exceptional and transformative contribution to our field. Thank you Dave. Without you, we would never have created OpenChain ISO/IEC 5230 and we would never have built this amazing community.

Watch The Awards

Lifetime Achievement

David Marr

National Champion

  • Kris Feng
  • Gao Kun
  • Sami Atabani

Exceptional Contributor

  • Balakrishna Mukundaraj
  • Ayumi Watanabe
  • Gary O’Neall
  • Maximilian Huber

Community Driver

  • Hiroyuki Fukuchi
  • Kiyoshi Owada
  • Andrew Katz
  • Haksung Jang
  • Oliver Fendt

The Steady Hand

  • David Rudin
  • Kate Stewart
  • Michael Dolan
  • Masato Endo
  • Marcel Kurzmann

The New Guard

  • Helio Chissini de Castro
  • Jimmy Ahlberg
  • Prasad Iyer
  • Jari Koivisto
  • Soim Kim
  • Mary Mattran

The First OpenChain Online Training With Individual Certification Is Available

By Featured, News

The OpenChain Education Work Group and LF Training have collaborated on Introduction to Open Source License Compliance Management (LFC193), a free course with individual certification is now available.

Who Is It For

This course is intended for developers, project managers and executive decision makers who already know the basics of what open source software is and how copyrights work and are ready to take the next step towards building a formal compliance program for their organization.

What You’ll Learn

This course provides a reference example of how an open source compliance program should be structured. It is designed to be used in the context of OpenChain ISO/IEC 5230:2020 but can be used for any open source compliance program. The course provides knowledge from the basics of intellectual property through to key concepts of an open source review. It is based on real-world experience and focuses on outcomes that are directly applicable to product and service deployment. The outcome of this course will be a clear understanding of how to use compliance as business optimization, reducing resource use and increasing efficiency.

What It Prepares You For

This course enables you to deal with the basics of open source license compliance management. You will be able to assess the current status of your company and begin planning improvements to processes. If you are a project manager, engineer or management personnel with a responsibility for architecture and strategy, this course will be particularly useful.

Get Started Here

Huge kudos to Balakrishna and everyone else in the Education Work Team for making this happen 🙂

OpenChain PlayBook – Medium Company – Now Available

By Featured, News

The first OpenChain PlayBook is now available. It focuses on showing how a medium size company can go from considering to using OpenChain ISO/IEC 5230:2020.

The OpenChain PlayBooks are intended to help you understand the types of decisions made by managers in companies adopting OpenChain ISO/IEC 5230:2020. We cover examples of the decision-process in small, medium and large companies. Our examples are based on companies (a) in the technology industry, (b) in the middle of the supply chain and (c) shipping physical products containing software.

This may sound specific. However, the intention is to provide a thinking-tool for your company. Whether you are in the technology, finance, cloud, infrastructure or automotive industry (or any other), you will face similar challenges and solutions. The same applies whether you are in the middle of the supply chain or at its end, and whether you are shipping hardware or software. Our chosen examples cover a lot of ground.

Finally, this PlayBook contains an appendix with all the questions you need to answer to become OpenChain ISO/IEC 5230:2020 conformant. If you can answer all of these questions with “yes,” you have a conformant program. If you answer some of the questions with “no,” you know where to invest resources.

Get The Medium Company PlayBook

There may be situations where you would like more examples for more specific industries. This is where the OpenChain community comes in. You can join our mailing lists, our webinars, our group calls and our regional work groups to discuss challenges with your peers and in your native language.

You can get started here: