In this issue of the FINOS newsletter, as we approach one year since FINOS was launched, we celebrate the continuous growth of our Community, highlighting notable achievements across a number of our programs and our continually growing roster of members.
From releasing new standards for the financial desktop, to providing guidance on open source license compliance to discussing the evolution of decentralized ecosystems, we've got it all covered. Read on to learn more and find out how to get involved:
More than 50 financial organizations supported development of the standard that was founded and contributed by FINOS member OpenFin. We'd like to thank OpenFin and the many active contributors to the recent release including Adaptive, Citadel, FactSet, GreenKey, IHS Markit, JP Morgan, Refinitiv, Scott Logic, Tick42, and Wellington among others.
Find out more about FDC3, and how to get involved here.
As our members and community engage more in open source development, license compliance inevitably becomes a major focus. While there's no shortage of information available about the various open source licenses, it’s not always easy to find information that is practical and accessible to developers on the front lines.
To help address this, FINOS collaborated with open source attorney Jilayne Lovejoy to produce the Open Source License Compliance Handbook, a reference guide to practical compliance information for common open source licenses. The goal here is to provide developers and engineers with "self-serve" information to facilitate the end goal of open source license compliance.
For more information about how to use the OSLC Handbook, see Jilayne's blog post here.
Go to the download page here to access the handbook.
On March 5th FINOS hosted its first Open Source in FinTech event of 2019 at Moody's Analytics Accelerator. Over 100 financial services professionals, technologists, and developers convened to discuss what it takes to build and sustain a decentralized ecosystem.
Rob Underwood, Director of Programs at FINOS, moderated a panel discussion between Patrick Nielsen, co-founder of Clovyr, and Dan Guido, CEO of Trail of Bits. The conversation spanned a range of topics including how "decentralized" is more than just blockchain technology; the new information security imperative; trends in crypto custody; and even the threat of quantum computing to existing crypto technologies.
For videos and a copy of the presentation, please visit the meetup wrap-up page here.
The Securities Reference Data Working Group is working on how to practically and incrementally address the challenges posed by having multiple and disparate sources of trade identifiers. As a first step, the group is looking at how to leverage existing initiatives and/or open source symbology to map entity/issuer static records across vendor feeds. They are looking for additional participants to provide input and help drive the discussion and solution forward. Read about the working group, roadmap and how to get involved; check out the FINOS program community calendar to join the next meeting; or email the group for more information.
The mission of the FINOS kdb+ Working Group is to curate common standards, tools, and libraries to facilitate collaborative development, ease artifact reuse, and improve usability and administration of kdb+ software in enterprise deployments. The group has published a q coding style document and is actively designing APIs for authorization handlers and processing command line arguments. Check out the code contributions starting to appear on GitHub branches. Read about the working group, roadmap and how to get involved; check out the FINOS program community calendar to join the next meeting; or email the group for more information.
Finally the Digital Rights Management working group launched last month, based on a recent contribution from JP Morgan. It will deliver tools to dynamically manage complicated permissions and access rights across a wide range of data and data sets. Information Property is central to the world of finance, where every organization plays three roles: information producer, data broker, and information consumer. Rights to use this property are often bespoke, complex to manage and now scrutinized by numerous parties, including regulators. Getting control of this ecosystem requires contracts, tools, and enforcement methods that delegate processing to computer code. Read about the working group and how to get involved or email the group for more information.
Then make sure you check our FINOS Activity Catalog for a comprehensive list of all our projects and working groups and then check out our shiny new Program Status Dashboard to see a live snapshot of our community contributors. As you know, our community is open to everyone, so, if you are not there already, when is your name going to show up in that dashboard? We hope it's soon!
In case you missed the press release, we recently announced that Capital One, Scott Logic, and GitLab joined as FINOS members. We are delighted to add them to our growing list of leading and innovative financial institutions and fintechs driving open source in financial services.
The past few months have been action packed at FINOS. Here's a sampling of coverage of the foundation and our members:
Why Open Source Matters for Square, Cheddar Interview with FINOS ED, Gabriele Columbro
Square’s CEO Jack Dorsey, introduced their commitment to open source in a short Twitter thread in late March. Cheddar interviewed FINOS Executive Director, Gabriele Columbro on this important milestone for open source and financial services. READ MORE
The Last Mile of the Digital Transformation Journey
FINOS Director of Programs, Rob Underwood, recently joined members James Wooster, COO at Glue42 and Nikhil Singvi, MD Core Trading Technology at Credit Suisse, on the panel of the TABB Forum & Glue42 webinar, "The Last Mile of the Digital Transformation Journey". Watch the webinar or read a related article from Monica Summerville. READ MORE
Movers and Shakers Interview with Gabriele Columbro
FINOS Executive Director, Gabriel Columbro, spoke with global research and consulting organization, Frost and Sullivan about the Foundation, challenges for its members, and trends on the horizon for the banking / fintech space... READ MORE
Alessandro Petroni, Head of Strategy for Financial Services, at FINOS member firm Red Hat, shared his insights on open source trends for financial services in 2019. We share his optimism and look forward to increased openness and collaboration across the industry in 2019... READ MORE
There will be plenty of opportunities to learn about and engage with all FINOS programs, see demos of recent contributions and hear from Aite Group on our joint research on open source in financial services. We're also fortunate to have Mike Grimaldi, CIO of the Corporate and Investment Bank at JP Morgan, kick us off with opening remarks.
The event is free for members and we encourage individuals from all areas to attend including developers, architects, engineers, designers, business analysts, project managers, product managers, and professionals in legal, compliance, strategy, business development and more. Space is limited so sign up now.
We're busy filling our event calendar with meet-ups, webinars, blogs, white papers, training sessions and more so check back regularly for additional detail. And if you'd like to partner with us on any of these activities please email marketing@finos.org.