EU Regulatory Success Prompts Open-Source CMS Leaders to Form Alliance

tl;dr

The Open Web Alliance is a formalization of the more loose Inter-CMS Working Group that recently scored a huge regulatory win by changing the language in the EU’s Cyber Resilience Act. Moving forward, the organization hopes to promote open-source projects and the cause of the open web to legislators around the world.

For those of us in WordPress, regulatory oversight is probably a future we can anticipate. If we want to remain competitive in the enterprise/government space, we’ll need to figure out how to be more proactive at compliance and security and get better at sharing the positive open-source narrative.


The regulatory landscape that the WordPress community finds itself in today is vastly different from where we’ve been. Governments are accelerating their regulatory oversight of technology and introducing new legislation regularly to try and catch up with the pace of innovation. 

In Europe recently we’ve seen two landmark pieces of legislation, the Digital Markets Act (DMA) and the proposed Cyber Resilience Act (CRA). While both have created news in technology circles it is the CRA that has been of particular concern to the WordPress community and other open-source projects. 

In an open letter to EU legislators in July 2023, the leaders of WordPress, Drupal, Joomla, and TYPO3 highlighted the risks to open-source and began a collaborative effort called the Inter-CMS Working Group to bring about significant change to the wording proposed in the CRA.

The Impact of Collaborative Advocacy

In early December, after several months of dialogue, investigation and negotiation, the EU parliament released an updated draft of the legislation that looks to have resolved many of the primary concerns raised by open-source communities.

The revised Act makes a concerted effort to ensure that the regulations are practical and do not hinder the collaborative spirit or the ways of working that open-source projects like WordPress rely on.

With the success of amending the CRA as a foundation to build on, the four open-source communities represented in the Inter-CMS Working Group recently established the Open Web Alliance.

This Alliance, now formalized with a charter, represents a collective commitment to furthering the education about and advocacy of open-source benefits and principles.

Reichstag building in Berlin, Germany.
Photo by Federico Orlandi on Pexels.com

The Future of the Open Web Alliance

The Open Web Alliance aims to promote and defend the rights of open-source projects, aspiring to create a better web. It emphasizes encouraging the use of open-source software, sharing best practices, and supporting third-party open-source projects.

This collaborative body, while not a legal entity, signifies a structured approach to ensuring open-source software remains a vibrant and integral part of the digital landscape.

Moving forward, the presence of the Open Web Alliance could be a game-changer in how open-source communities navigate regulatory challenges and advocate for policies that recognize and support the unique nature of open-source development.

Its charter underscores a commitment to openness, trust, and quality, offering a platform for open-source CMS projects to collaborate more effectively.

This transition toward a more formalized alliance underscores the WordPress community’s role not just in advocacy, but in shaping a future where open-source principles are acknowledged and protected in the global digital policy arena.

The Open Web Alliance’s foundation and its charter reflect a mature, strategic approach to ensuring that the ethos of open-source software continues to thrive amidst an evolving regulatory landscape.

Navigating A Regulatory Future: Implications for WordPress Businesses

The recent developments around the CRA and the active role of the (now) Open Web Alliance highlight a broader trend: the regulatory landscape impacting open-source software is evolving.

For WordPress businesses, the amendments to the CRA represent a momentary sigh of relief, but the horizon suggests that regulatory challenges will persist.

From a business perspective, the future willingness of enterprises and government entities to adopt open-source software may hinge on how effectively the community can navigate these regulations.

The Open Web Alliance’s efforts to advocate for open-source principles–emphasizing security, reliability, and openness–become crucial in this context. 

It’s also worth considering that the relationship dynamics between government entities, enterprises, and open-source vendors are likely to evolve. A failure to leverage open-source software due to regulatory or compliance concerns could limit innovation and flexibility for governments and businesses alike. 

For the WordPress ecosystem, this underscores the importance of supporting initiatives like the Open Web Alliance, ensuring that open-source software remains a viable, attractive option for all users, regardless of the regulatory climate.

By focusing on education, advocacy, and the development of compliance tools, the WordPress community can help mitigate potential reservations from enterprise and government sectors.

This proactive stance not only defends the community’s interests but also promotes the fundamental advantages of open-source software in fostering innovation, security, and a more inclusive digital future.

What do you think? Is this just a dodged bullet of government over-reach or the beginning of a new more regulated future? How do you think businesses and contributors should respond?

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10 responses to “EU Regulatory Success Prompts Open-Source CMS Leaders to Form Alliance”

  1. Hi. I don’t know enough to comment on the efficacy of this move. I hope that ongoing negotiations will result in protection for Open Source software, even despite (predictably) fierce efforts by profit-making centers to work toward a landscape of predominantly proprietary software and applications. Using terms however such as “government overreach” is not helpful in this context, as they come from the world of aggrieved businesses and corporations trying to “get out from under” government regulations, not from the world of creatives and non-profits trying to work on reining in those very aggressive profit-makers and make space for sharing, community, and a collaborative and cooperative world wide web. Please let’s not start talking as though all regulation were necessarily bad. Regulating large business interests on the web is crucial to maintaining space for Open Source and Shared resource creation.

    • I’ll admit using the term ‘government overreach’ was designed to illicit a response and get people talking. If you read what the leadership groups of the four founding members have said you’ll also see that the goal is not to oppose any and all regulation but to find the balance between innovation and regulation. I suspect that your view is similar to what many in the leadership group of the Open Web Alliance have.

      Thanks for your comment!

  2. I wonder what the OWA uses for their website?

    Anyways, the problem with these kind of organizations over years, it’s always been a small group controlling things that don’t want to let the reigns go.

    Similar to WordCamp organizers or local meetup groups. When they can’t do it or too burned out, no WC that year. Instead of giving the reigns to others in the community (that are not their friends).

    Why are these people speaking on behalf of the community? Was there a vote? a discussion?

    or is it that they have the money to speak thus people with not so much financial gains can’t really have their voice? and one annual meeting does not count.

    If you have a different opinion, those few controlling people will just drown you out.

    I have absolutely no faith in the OWA

  3. It is somewhat concerning that this alliance has taken the exact same acronym as the existing Open Web Advocacy group, which has been instrumental in the DMA (and other global regulatory activities) coming into existence.

    https://open-web-advocacy.org/

    They are focused at the moment on addressing the fact that Apple has killed web apps in the EU – starting March 7.

    https://open-web-advocacy.org/apple-attempts-killing-webapps/

    Anyone who cares should connect with them.

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