Open Source Program Office

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

An Open Source Program Office (OSPO) is a department formed by subject-matter experts involved in free and open software. This team may also oversee the operation of open standards and digital public goods. It often includes an understanding of legal compliance issues and risk management, but is not limited to this. OSPOs can also play a role in culture change within an organization.

Implementations

Companies that have OSPOs include Yahoo!,[1] Goldman Sachs,[2] Bloomberg L.P., Comcast, and Porsche.[3] Universities with OSPOs include Trinity College Dublin,[4] the University of Vermont,[5] and Johns Hopkins University.[6] CERN launched its OSPO in 2023.[7] The U.S. federal government agency Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services has also established an OSPO to help them improve organizational effectiveness.[8][9]

The Linux Foundation has projects that support people developing or maintaining OSPOs, TODO Group and Community Health Analytics in Open Source Software (CHAOSS).[10] There is also an OSPO community for those working in university and research institution OSPOs, called CURIOSS.[11]

Responsibilities

The tasks of an OSPO include business oriented goals:

OSPOs also handle technical and legal compliance issues, such as:

  • Technical support of projects
  • Maintenance of public and private repositories on GitHub and GitLab for version control.[14][15]
  • Release for use of free software[vague]
  • Documentation of dependencies in used or included free software to prevent vulnerability or software license violations from third-party software.
  • Creation and monitoring of license compliance policies of free-software licenses in deployed applications or published products[13][12][3]

References

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