Linux Foundation announces $12.5m for open source security

The Linux Foundation has secured $12.5 million in grants from AI companies to bolster open source software security. The funding addresses maintainers overwhelmed by AI-generated vulnerability reports. It will be managed by Alpha-Omega and the Open Source Security Foundation.

The Linux Foundation announced $12.5 million in grants on March 19, 2026, aimed at strengthening open source software security. This initiative, managed by its security-focused projects Alpha-Omega and the Open Source Security Foundation (OpenSSF), targets the challenge of open source maintainers struggling with a surge of security findings from AI tools—some legitimate, others hallucinations generated at a scale they cannot handle alone. Contributing AI companies include Anthropic, Google, Google DeepMind, GitHub, Microsoft, and OpenAI. The projects plan to collaborate directly with maintainers to develop practical security tooling that integrates into existing workflows, helping them manage rising demands without being overwhelmed. Greg Kroah-Hartman, a Linux Foundation Fellow and Linux kernel maintainer, noted the issue's validity, referencing a prior incident. In 2025, cURL's bug bounty program on HackerOne faced a flood of AI-generated reports lacking proper research. cURL creator Daniel Stenberg warned that submitters of such reports would be publicly named, ridiculed, and banned, but this did not deter them. By January 2026, the program had received 20 such submissions in its first few weeks, leading to its complete shutdown. Proponents view the grants as a constructive step, though not a full solution to AI-generated noise in open source security efforts.

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Tech leaders announcing Linux Foundation's AI-powered cybersecurity initiative for open source software with major partners.
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Linux Foundation announces AI security initiative with tech partners

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The Linux Foundation has launched a new initiative using Anthropic's Claude Mythos preview for defensive cybersecurity in open source software. Partners include AWS, Apple, Broadcom, Cisco, CrowdStrike, Google, JPMorgan, Microsoft, NVIDIA, and Palo Alto Networks. The effort aims to secure critical software amid the rise of AI for open source maintainers.

The Linux Foundation has released new research indicating that organizations contributing to open source projects achieve 2-5 times return on investment. Non-contributors, meanwhile, face risks of up to $3.5 million in hidden labor and maintenance costs. The findings emphasize how participation in open source compounds value for businesses.

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The Linux Foundation, partnering with Meta, released a report at the India AI Impact Summit in New Delhi on February 17, 2026, highlighting how open source AI drives India's economic growth. The study reveals that 76% of Indian startups use open source AI, with the market projected to expand from $6 billion in 2024 to nearly $32 billion by 2031. It also addresses workforce challenges and social applications of the technology.

The Linux Foundation has issued a call for papers for the Linux Security Summit North America 2026, inviting experts to share insights on Linux security topics. The submission deadline is March 8. Sessions will cover areas such as access control, hardware security, and supply chain protection.

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The Linux Foundation has introduced the Open Source 101 track at the Open Source Summit and Embedded Linux Conference. The track aims to help newcomers and those sharpening fundamentals advance their careers. The event is scheduled for May 18–20 in Minneapolis.

The Linux Foundation has announced the election of Shojiro Nakao from Panasonic Automotive Systems and Yoshitake Kobayashi from Toshiba Corporation to its Board of Directors. This addition brings expertise in automotive, embedded Linux, and critical infrastructure to guide the organization's global strategy. The announcement highlights the role of open source leadership in shaping future global infrastructure.

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Linux stable kernel maintainer Greg Kroah-Hartman has started using an AI-assisted fuzzing tool in a branch named 'clanker' to test the kernel codebase. The tool has already prompted fixes for vulnerabilities in subsystems like ksmbd and SMB. Patches from this effort now cover areas including USB, HID, WiFi, and networking.

 

 

 

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