a16z Podcast

a16z Podcast: The Changing Culture of Open Source

Apr 8, 2017
Nadia Eghbal, a former Ford Foundation researcher now at GitHub, and Mikeal Rogers, the community manager at Node.js Foundation, dive into the evolution of open source culture. They discuss how today’s contributors expect open source as a given while nurturing decentralized identities. The pair also highlights the importance of sustaining communities through engaging governance models and the challenges in balancing popularity with community health. Their insights uncover how collaboration is shifting, emphasizing inclusivity and innovative decision-making for project longevity.
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ANECDOTE

IOJS Fork

  • Mikeal Rogers discusses the IOJS fork of Node.js, which was driven by governance disagreements, not technical ones.
  • The fork successfully increased contributors from a handful to over 90 by changing the contribution model.
INSIGHT

Popularity vs. Health

  • Nadia Eghbal emphasizes the disconnect between user base and maintainer numbers in open source projects.
  • Popularity doesn't equate to project health, as seen with OpenSSL's critical Heartbleed bug despite widespread use.
INSIGHT

Heartbleed Example

  • A project's decline doesn't stop its usage, creating risks like Heartbleed in OpenSSL.
  • Despite its critical role in internet security, OpenSSL had few maintainers, highlighting the importance of project health.
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