 ¿Me escuchan? ¡Hola! Buenos días a todos. ¿Qué tal estamos? ¡Oh, espera! Me están diciendo que tengo que hacer esto en inglés. Ok, ¿cómo están ustedes hoy? Estoy muy emocionado de estar aquí. Espero que están también. Soy Gabriel Colombro. Si ustedes lo esperan en Jim. Perdón, me quedaste hoy. Tenemos un programa súper emocionado esta semana. Estoy muy, muy emocionado de estar aquí. Entonces, antes de empezar con nuestro programa, tengo unos anuncios de housekeeping que voy a pasar. Y luego podemos empezar. Así que, primero, quiero agradecer a nuestros sponsoros de tiempo para la conferencia. Gracias a Google, Fujitsu y a nuestros amigos de OpenUler. Vamos a realmente apreciar su apoyo. No pudimos hacer esto sin ustedes. Y también a nuestros sponsoros de Platinum para la conferencia. Es muy genial ser en este buen menú. Y, de nuevo, esto no sería posible con todos nuestros sponsoros. Así que, gracias mucho a todos los sponsoros de la conferencia. También quiero dar un saludo a nuestro programa. Si les gusta el programa durante la semana, es porque han hecho un gran trabajo revisando el contenido. Un gran saludo a los chaos. Así que, estamos muy, muy agradecidos. Esto es un esfuerzo de comunidad. Y no pudimos hacer esto sin nuestros chaos. Entonces, un par de notas de housekeeping para que les guste la conferencia y hacer lo más. Nuestros sponsoros de la conferencia están en la pared Zero. Empecemos a ver el final de los notas de hoy. Y eso es lo que los cofes son. Tenemos una buena excusa para estar vivo y cofinado ahí. También tenemos archivos de arqueo, un track de la caja. En general, el track de la caja es la más valiente de la conferencia. Espero que les mostren ahí. Un poco de información en tu caja, tu password de wifi, y tienes tu escénico en la parte de tu caja y tienes el signo por todo el venue. Y luego, un par de cosas que no te han perdido. Tenemos una mujer y una búsqueda de búsqueda. No hay registración necesaria. Y es open to all attendees que se identifiquen como mujeres o non-binary. Y una de las partes favoritas es preguntar a las sesiones expertas. Cuando era un nuevo contribuidor, me encantó preguntar directamente a algunos de los expertos en todos los proyectos representados aquí hoy. A las sesiones expertas están en la conferencia de sponsoros, Floor Zero, y las sesiones comienzan en 3.10 hoy. La última vez. Al final del día, vamos a tener la recepción. Un agradecimiento enorme, sponsorizado por Docker. La recepción es en el Stadium de San Mames. Estoy muy emocionado de ir allí. No creo que sea en San Mames, sino que creo en mi equipo de fútbol perdiendo en San Mames. Para ir a un evento divertido, no olvides llevar tu baile. Es necesario ir a los eventos. Y luego, muy importante, todos nuestros eventos son incluidos. Y todos deberían ser bienvenidos. Así que, asegúrate de que todos con respeto y de manera inerciosa. Si hay any issues, y hay any concerns, please go to registration on Floor One or at the Info Desk, the sponsor showcase on Floor Zero, and the fantastic Linux Foundation Event Team will be able to help you. And with that, I think we are done with housekeeping, so we're going to get started. We have a fantastic program today, but before we start, some of you, how many of you were at Open Source Summit last year? Good amount. So last year we launched Linux Foundation Europe, which I happen to have the honour to lead. It's a European entity based in Brussels. It's been a pretty busy year, we had our first member summit yesterday, and so before I just jumped into the programming, I just want to send a shout out to the whole most 150 organizations who have really supported us, really validating the idea that while Open Source is global, there are certain priorities in Europe that we can really focus on and collaborate together. So once again, thank you so much and I'm so honoured to be here leading the Open Source Summit. Hopefully I'll fill some big shoes, jeans shoes. So before we get started with the program, I want to try to tee up some of the key themes that you're going to see in the next few days. We have some exciting announcements, and some of the content is really tailored towards our experience in Europe from the last year and some of the lessons that we learned. So first and foremost, and I might be biased here, besides running Linux Foundation Europe, I am the executive director of a foundation called FINOS, FinTech Open Source Foundation. Who knew that you could actually get banks to collaborate in Open Source? Something, you know, probably 10 years so I wouldn't have bet on. But we are seeing increasing focus from each industry undergoing the digital transformation. They really understand how Open Source is a core pillar, a core accelerator for digital transformation. So we'll talk about it a lot today. On the other hand, I think there is a strong relationship between Open Source and the public sector. We're seeing a lot of engagement, a lot of push for Open Source consumption and for Open Source as a driver for the digital transformation of the public sector and digital sovereignty. That said, it's still a complicated relationship and we're going to develop this team throughout today in the next couple of days. Open Governance. I think you all know what Open Source is and I think you all know what Open Governance means. That said, outside of the Open Source eco chamber, sometimes there is some confusion as to what a foundation can bring to the table in terms of making sure that all the different constituents can collaborate together. So we'll have some exciting announcements on this in the next actually today and tomorrow. And then this is one of the near and dear to my heart and there's actually two themes here. You probably heard about the push for Open Source sustainability, not only Open Source security but how we support maintainers. But this year we've seen a lot of advancements in how Open Source can drive the world sustainability. Helping solve some of the most pressing challenges out there. Whether it be climate change, whether it be rare sort of extinction of species. This is I think something that not always we realize Open Source has a huge collaboration and you all have it. And then last but not least you would not be surprised in 2023 the year of AI there's going to be a lot of talk of at the intersection of Open Source and AI and how Open Source has really throughout the year accelerated both the democratization and just plainly the innovation that is happening in AI. So I hope you find this exciting and I'm going to get started with our first theme for the day. So as I said I might be biased because I worked for now six years on a foundation bringing ideas together, but all of you might be quite familiar with some of the most sort of famous projects in the Linux foundation Linux itself, Kubernetes maybe less of you are familiar with the fact that we have very much a foundation that supports every industry to collaborate. A left networking focuses on the telco industry we have automotive grade Linux for the automotive industry we actually have a project the academy software foundation that focuses on the film industry of course Finos on the financial services side LF energy for the energy sector we even have highly regulated industries like insurance, OpenIDL is a blockchain based exchange of insurance data and last but not least agriculture so we are seeing this trend continue to develop in the last few years and what I've learned as an Italian living in California but now back in Europe for Linux foundation Europe unsurprisingly a lot of these foundations have a strong footprint in Europe Europe has so many leading organizations in all of these verticals and so we are seeing a lot of acceleration in this area and I think this is going to continue we are going to see more and more industries every industry becomes digitally native they simply cannot do it without open source but don't trust me don't trust an Italian on this we luckily have data and so I want to start with our first announcement if you were in Dublin last year we unveiled our first world of open source survey with a focus on Europe today we are announcing our world of open source Europe spotlight 2023 which is a survey focused on the advancement of open source specifically in Europe I'm not going to go through every single finding but you got the QR code there you can download the report it's free the data set is usually open you can see you guys can come up with some super interesting findings out of this survey and we also have a deep dive tomorrow at 2.20pm we have a fantastic panel that is going to dive deeper into the findings where you can understand both how individual contributors the public sector and of course enterprises are seeing increased value in open source I'm going to give you just a quick spoiler before we tear up our first guest speakers you would not be surprised to see that in Europe at this point the business value of open source so we all know, we're all familiar with as open source contributors we know what brings us towards open source but it's certainly great to see the more and more incorporate environments the business value of open source is well understood to the point that over half of respondents if you look at year on year they state that there is growth in the value that they are seeing in open source for their organization and this is actually across all respondents organizations, public sector and individuals up to the level that 91% of the respondents is saying that open source is vital it's critical to the development of their industry and this is honestly not surprising if you followed the advancement in AI and how critical open source has been to the innovation that is coming and the really revolution that is coming through AI in every single aspect of our personal life and businesses this is only accelerating the pressure to have an open source strategy to engage in open source community to support upstream projects you know you'd not be surprised to see that if you exclude big tech or high tech every other industry is expected to see from 2% to 5% of the revenue changed and evolved and grown by the impact of AI so in fact only accelerating the pressure for these industries to innovate how they very much do open source and more generally how they are digitally native and so as we start with this first team around vertical industries I am super excited to bring on stage Harpitya Shippura is the general manager of networking Edge and IoT with a couple of distinguished guests thank you Harpitya thank you thank you and we have some exciting news today but more importantly we are going to talk about industries and verticals that Gabe said that are 100 years old and I'll just get the clicker but 100 year old industries that historically always relied on proprietary hardware and software telecommunications, energy banking, automotive and to accelerate the speed of innovation it has moved to open source I call it open source which is fantastic and so before we get to the news I want to set the context this is how you are all connected in the world globally we have 3 major sub foundations within the Linux foundation we have connectivity which addresses all the rural and dense connectivity plus there is Oran software community that addresses the mobile connectivity that you all are sort of checking the phones right now and then we have LF Edge which is a huge market for edge computing which is 4 times the size of cloud computing and we have projects in edge computing across IoT, cloud, telecom and enterprise edge and then on the core and the cloud side on the right hand side you have the entire stack from network operating systems to data plane control plane and applications and the great news is we have projects that are deployed in the world today running open source software very proud of that the more important part is 80% of the top 10 LF networking and we have 2 of them here on the stage today Deutsche Telecom and Oran that represent a big chunk of open source adoption and so they are going to talk about 2 very critical projects and an announcement so first of all let's hand it over to Nicholas who is the director strategy and transformation at Oran to talk about Silva hello everybody so I'm going to talk about Silva and basically Silva does 2 things number 1 we deliver a cloud native production grade stack that is aiming at addressing the telco and edge use cases the funny thing is the more we talk with other verticals the more we see that it's not only for telco so it's really broader than that for me it's important to say that Silva does not reinvent the wheel we integrate open source components that are already present in the ecosystem like the CNCF for instance and we implement specifications that are drafted by other entities like the Anuket reference architecture 2nd the validation centers the Silva stack is delivered and then we install it in validation centers and we invite providers to test the behavior of their workloads to validate it so in terms of progress where are we it's not even been a year since the launch of the project and we already have published and released 2 versions of the stack including the bare metal one we have 2 validation centers up and running and we have a very active community since the launch with the founding members we more than doubled the number of active participants and now thanks to the launch of the directed fund we have the means to accelerate the delivery of the project and reinforce this community so we are here in Bilbao, come and talk to us join the project, join the fund we are present at several booths the Linux Foundation Europe booth the Suze booth, the Huawei booth so come and see us and try to keep in mind our motto every cloud deserves a Silva Lightning thank you thank you great great progress and thank you for the announcement next up is Marcus who is the program manager of Machan Tai PI and the Kamara foundation from Deutsche Telecom, take it on so good morning from my side also I could not imagine when initiating Kamara two and a half years ago with others that today I will be on stage here telling you that we already have grown to more than 750 people from more than 250 companies all over the globe and on top that Linux Foundation that the GSMA and team forum have signed on white paper dedicating Kamara to be the organization on this planet to define the APIs the interface between telco industry and the customers that is really fantastic success for us and for that I am really happy now to announce that we go to the next level we are initiating a Kamara front project and already have won 15 sponsors for that so that helps us to be a real reliant partner for the whole industry thank you good job and as you can see you know this is a way of monetizing the rich data that exists in the network today and allowing things like AI to run on top of that so very good progress on these two fronts we are also announcing that Linux Foundation is expanding the partnership with Etsy and expanding its collaboration for projects like Nefio projects like Kamara and the press releases out right now but again everything thanks to the dedication and support from the EU community along with the global community so really excited about that thank you very much for the announcement and one final thing for those of you who know the open networking summit if you remember 10 years ago we launched it in Silicon Valley with Stanford it's back in Silicon Valley next year save the date we hope to see as many of you as possible we are going to talk about all the innovation coming up in the entire networking sector edge sector and the AI implications on that right from the heart of Silicon Valley so with that thank you very much and thank you to our guests for these awesome announcements thank you thank you guys thank you wow we're off to a great start I think I'm really excited to see industries investing in open source honestly when I started I wasn't really the case now we're going to have to move to our next theme for the day which we're going to start today and continue developing throughout the week as I said you're probably familiar with the critical role that open source plays in the public sector not just as consumption many countries in Europe promote open source usage sometimes open source unless type policies I spent my early days of open source contribution in Holland in 2005-2006 and they were already betting on open source but especially the European Union has been pushing open source as a really strong driver for achieving digital sovereignty digital commons and that's what we've seen already in the survey last year this is a result from last year's open source spotlight and we seem to see a common trend here on one hand there is a strong strategic sort of messaging a statement towards the critical nature of open source for the public sector on the other hand we see between sort of consumption and contribution there seem to be a little bit of a disconnect that doesn't allow the public sector to fully capitalize whether it is a national government level or EU level to fully capitalize on open source and the results this year seem to sort of confirm that I touched before I think a clear understanding that open source can really help social impact and can really help solving some of the world most pressing challenges like climate change, social inequality but once again this year we found in the survey that the perceived value of open source in the public sector has somewhat stagnated it seems that while we continue to see more individual contributors, we continue to see more industries investing in open source the public sector is moving more slowly there seem to be a disconnect and so today I need to talk about something that is really important on a more serious note can I ask a question how many of you are familiar with the cyber resilience act that's a good number hopefully by the end of today it's going to be an even higher number but the cyber resilience act is one of the many regulations that are coming down from the you regulating software and while I think it's important to say that the goals are absolutely worthy bolstering the cyber security as a national security issue or a you wide security issue there seem to be some fundamental misconception in the current draft of the regulation it is not effective yet it's entering into trilogues for those of you who are more familiar with the Brussels legislative process there are a couple of important disconnects there on one hand it seems that the goals that are very worthy are not necessarily properly implemented and they actually risk to impact open source pretty heavily the way we know it and even further we published a post from Mirko Bohm who is our senior director of community development and an economist for a very well renowned open source expert in Europe this might even actually undermine the very goals of the year of digital sovereignty because it does impact the open source ecosystem as we know it last but not least, critical constituents like individual contributors and foundations have not been first class citizens in this conversation earlier in the year we published an open letter with the major other open source foundations, the Apache software foundation eclipse open photo in Europe and several other organizations in Europe just for context this is what happened last week on the other side of the pond again bearing in mind I never really had the American dream, I live in California but that's not where I saw myself ending there but last week the White House called OpenSSF and some other foundations to really provide input on how we all together bolster cybersecurity open source and cyber security that go hand in hand and we've not seen the same approach here in Europe so I want to be very specific because this is an area where we will need your help the CRA as is has the chance to truly uphand the value exchange as we know it the open value exchange that happen in open source communities open source has always been provided for the benefit of users as is and the CRA the way it's drafted right now it does put liability on upstream developers and foundations and there's been many calls for change over the last year but we have not seen substantial changes in the CRA that is now entering its final legislative phase with the trilogues and then the planning so what does that mean there's very much a chance that in order to prevent liability open source projects could be blocked for downloads into the EU or being published with a disclaimer not approved for use in the EU and I mean I used to be a release manager and if at a certain point my build starts breaking because my upstream dependence is all of a sudden and not available trust me I'd be quite pissed so what we are asking today is for everyone to speak up this is going to have potential impact open source as the beautiful thing that we've all been used to rely on so we are launching today campaign we got stickers at our linux foundation Europe booth but that's more than that we need you to speak up and first of all educate yourself we have a panel on Thursday which is going to go much deeper than I can in the limited amount of time that I have but also we publish if you go to linuxfoundation.eu you have a compendium of all the opinions and thoughts that all the foundations and all the different constituencies that are put together those are very much commercial organizations and associations that are putting statement of concern when it comes to the CRA so whether you are an individual on the left side or I guess right side well whatever for developers whether you are a representative of an organization that maybe has a public affairs department get involved today these two QR codes link to click to tweet we try to make it super easy for you to be engaged and be vocal about it but you can also go to the web page and there's going to be a forum when you can get in touch we are trying to work with all of our community to make sure that we protect open source in the EU the way we know it I thank you in advance for that now besides calling for action to our community we understand that our role is continue educating the community and so this year based on really the major opportunity that we've seen through linuxfoundation Europe for better engagement of the public sector we are announcing another report that really surveyed some of the most the biggest experts in open source in Europe from maintainers to policy experts to corporate open source contributors that really goes deep into the opportunities and clearly challenges of public sector engagement in open source you know I personally think there is a huge opportunity in Europe for bringing together public and private sector in truly investing in open source in sustainability of open source in making sure that there is a fair balance between consumption and contribution so once again QR code you can download it the data set is open I'm not going to go again through all of it today but I will go deeper on it on Thursday during the linuxfoundation Europe specific update but I leave you with one finding that probably is not going to surprise you according to our interviews interviewees open source is still a very strong driver for digital sovereignty Europe has a huge opportunity through open source to plot its digital future on the other hand and that's one of the reasons why linuxfoundation Europe was very much created digital sovereignty doesn't mean technonationalism doesn't mean vulcanization of open source and so there has been a really broad call from all the experts in Europe to make sure that we foster digital sovereignty but without fostering additional division in open source to keep open source global I really appreciate you taking action on this and with that that's the end of my first presentation thank you