Dear all,
I would like to contribute to our working group, and
hereby present my self-nomination for the Steering Committee,
bringing to bear the experience from 25 years dedicated to
advancing Open Source, Open Science and software. Here follow
my short bio and a position statement, as requested.
Bio
Roberto Di Cosmo is an alumnus of the Scuola Normale Superiore
di Pisa and holds a PhD in Computer Science from the
University of Pisa. After serving as an associate professor at
École Normale Supérieure in Paris, he became a full professor
at Université Paris Diderot in 1999, where he also headed the
doctoral program in Computer Science from 2004 to 2009.
Currently on leave at Inria, he is President of the board of
trustees and scientific advisory board of the IMDEA Software
Institute and chairs the Software chapter of the French
National Committee for Open Science.
As a committed advocate for Free Software since 1998, he
worked to promote open-source principles across research,
industry, and government settings, coordinating significant
projects like the European Mancoosi initiative, which united
10 partners and a €4.4M budget to improve package-based Open
Source systems, the Free Software Thematic Group in the
Systematic competitiveness cluster, that shepherded over 50
fully free software R&D projects involving industry and
research institutions, for a total funding of over 250 million
euros, and the IRILL research structure dedicated to studying
the new problems arising from the massive availability of open
source software.
Since 2015, he directs Software Heritage, an ambitious
initiative founded to create a universal, enduring archive of
all publicly available source code in partnership with UNESCO.
Position Statement
I am deeply committed to fostering robust, resilient
software infrastructure within an open and collaborative
framework, and I believe that strengthening cybersecurity in
Open Source systems is paramount. My involvement with the
National Committee for Open Science, along with my experience
leading Software Heritage, has sharpened my understanding of
regulatory challenges in Open Source, particularly regarding
transparency, security, and long-term digital preservation.
As a member of this steering committee, I aim to contribute my
expertise in software quality assurance, large-scale software
analysis, and the governance of open-source ecosystems. I look
forward to helping shape policies that can support and
safeguard the open, interconnected software infrastructure on
which our society increasingly depends.
Thank you for considering my application, and the opportunity
to contribute to this essential initiative.
Best regards,
--
Roberto Di Cosmo
------------------------------------------------------------------
Computer Science Professor
(on leave at
INRIA from IRIF/Université Paris Cité)
Director
75647 Paris Cedex
Tel : +33 1 80 49 44 42
------------------------------------------------------------------
GPG fingerprint 2931 20CE
3A5A 5390 98EC 8BFC FCCA C3BE 39CB 12D3