Open-source security gets cash
The Linux Foundation announced a $12.5 million push to secure critical open-source infrastructure as Big Tech’s reliance on community code skyrockets — the fund targets the supply-chain and maintenance risks amplified by generative AI. Companies building on open models now face a higher bar for dependency management and reliability. (clubic.com)
Anthropic, Amazon Web Services (AWS), GitHub, Google (and Google DeepMind), Microsoft and OpenAI formally pledged grants to the Linux Foundation on March 17, 2026. (linuxfoundation.org (linuxfoundation.org)) The announced grants will be managed by the Alpha‑Omega initiative and the Open Source Security Foundation (OpenSSF) to develop long‑term, maintainer‑centric security tooling and programs. (openssf.org (openssf.org)) Anthropic reported that its Claude Opus 4.6 model found and validated more than 500 high‑severity vulnerabilities in an initial research round, a figure cited by backers as evidence of an AI‑driven surge in vulnerability discovery. (aws.amazon.com (aws.amazon.com)) Organizers described the new funding as building on prior multi‑million‑dollar commitments from AWS, Google and Microsoft to Alpha‑Omega made over the past four years. (aws.amazon.com (aws.amazon.com)) Planned deliverables include automation, tooling and maintainers’ resources meant to help projects validate and remediate legitimate vulnerabilities quickly while filtering out low‑quality AI‑generated reports. (aws.amazon.com (aws.amazon.com)) Several projects have already adopted AI‑submission guidelines or paused upstream contributions to cope with the influx, and Linux kernel maintainer Greg Kroah‑Hartman warned that grant funding alone will not resolve maintainers’ workload without integrated processes and tooling. (aws.amazon.com (aws.amazon.com); linuxfoundation.org (linuxfoundation.org))