Collaborative effort aims to establish common specifications for secure software development based on existing open source best practices. Credit: t-mizo The Eclipse Foundation announced that it is partnering with the Apache Software Foundation and other open source foundations to establish common specifications for secure software development based on existing open source best practices. In an April 2 blog post, Eclipse said that the goal of the initiative was to meet the challenges of cybersecurity in the open source ecosystem and demonstrate cooperation with the European Union’s Cyber Resilience Act (CRA). Participants include Apache, Eclipse, the Rust Foundation, the PHP Foundation, the Blender Foundation, the OpenSSL Software Foundation, and the Python Software Foundation. The collaborative effort will be hosted at the Brussels-based Eclipse Foundation AISBL under the auspices of the Eclipse Foundation Specification Process and a new working group. Other code-hosting open source foundations and industry players are invited to join. The starting point for the technical standardization effort will be current security policies and procedures of open source foundations and similar documents describing best practices. The governance of the working group will follow the Eclipse-led model but will be augmented by representation from the open source community. The deliverables will consist of one or more process specifications available under a liberal specification copyright license and a royalty-free patent license, Eclipse said. Interested persons can receive updates on the effort by signing up for the Eclipse mailing list. Related content feature 14 great preprocessors for developers who love to code Sometimes it seems like the rules of programming are designed to make coding a chore. Here are 14 ways preprocessors can help make software development fun again. By Peter Wayner Nov 18, 2024 10 mins Development Tools Software Development feature Designing the APIs that accidentally power businesses Well-designed APIs, even those often-neglected internal APIs, make developers more productive and businesses more agile. By Jean Yang Nov 18, 2024 6 mins APIs Software Development news Spin 3.0 supports polyglot development using Wasm components Fermyon’s open source framework for building server-side WebAssembly apps allows developers to compose apps from components created with different languages. By Paul Krill Nov 18, 2024 2 mins Microservices Serverless Computing Development Libraries and Frameworks news Go language evolving for future hardware, AI workloads The Go team is working to adapt Go to large multicore systems, the latest hardware instructions, and the needs of developers of large-scale AI systems. By Paul Krill Nov 15, 2024 3 mins Google Go Generative AI Programming Languages Resources Videos