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Who gets credit for open source success?
Like so many winning projects, Weaveworks’ Cortex is the result of a long and winding chain of open source inspiration and innovation Credit: Dreamstime
Over 2000 years ago the Roman historian Tacitus observed that “Victory is claimed by all” or, as some translations put it, “Success has many fathers.” Open source is similar.
For example, Amazon Web Services (AWS) recently worked with Grafana Labs to build and launch a managed Prometheus service two companies joining together to deliver the open source monitoring software as a cloud service. Sounds simple, right?
To get to that Prometheus service a number of different companies and open source communities played a part: SoundCloud, which gave birth to Prometheus; Hyperic, the inspiration behind Cortex (by way of Scope); SpringSource, which recognized the business value in monitoring. Oh, and at the center of everything, Weaveworks, the company perhaps best known for GitOps but which also created Cortex.
Buried in the history of Cortex is a lesson in apportioning open source credit. The tl;dr? It’s complicated. It’s also diffuse. And it’s exactly how open source is supposed to work.
Money and open source