EU Open Source Strategy Deadline Looms as GitHub Rallies Developer Input



Terrill Dicki
Jan 27, 2026 14:49

European Commission’s Open Digital Ecosystem Strategy enters final feedback phase with Feb 3 deadline. GitHub reveals 25M EU developers made 155M contributions.





The European Commission’s call for evidence on its open source strategy closes February 3, and GitHub is pushing developers to weigh in before the window shuts. Over 900 stakeholders have already submitted feedback on the “Towards European Open Digital Ecosystems” initiative—a strategic framework that could reshape how the EU funds and supports open source infrastructure.

Fresh data from GitHub’s Innovation Graph puts the stakes in perspective: nearly 25 million EU-based developers now use the platform, generating more than 155 million contributions to public repositories in the past year alone. That’s a substantial talent pool the Commission wants to leverage for technological sovereignty.

What’s Actually on the Table

Unlike typical EU regulatory efforts, this isn’t about new laws. The Commission is designing a funding and support framework targeting open source software and hardware across AI, cloud computing, and cybersecurity. Think grants, procurement reforms, and better access to growth capital for open source businesses.

GitHub has been banging this drum for a while. The company previously called for a European Sovereign Tech Fund to maintain critical open source infrastructure—the libraries and programming languages that underpin everything from fintech platforms to DeFi protocols. This strategy could make that happen.

The Commission is asking for input on five specific areas: barriers to open source adoption, concrete EU actions needed, priority technologies, and which industries—automotive, manufacturing, finance—would benefit most from open source adoption.

The Commercial Question

Here’s where it gets interesting for crypto and blockchain projects. The EU wants to help turn open source projects into sustainable businesses through easier public procurement access and growth capital. But GitHub’s response acknowledges a tension: not every open source project can or should become a commercial product.

Many blockchain protocols, DeFi tools, and crypto infrastructure projects rely on non-commercial open source components. A policy that only supports commercialization pathways could leave critical infrastructure underfunded.

The strategy builds on the EU’s 2020-2023 Open Source Software Strategy and connects to broader initiatives like the Cloud and AI Development Act. Publication is expected in Q1 2026, with implementation following throughout the year.

For developers building in the EU—whether on traditional software or Web3 infrastructure—the February 3 deadline represents a rare chance to influence policy before it’s written. The feedback portal remains open at the Commission’s Better Regulation website.

Image source: Shutterstock


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