Linux Foundation
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The Linux Foundation is an American 501(c)(6) nonprofit trade association based in San Francisco, California, that supports the development of Linux and other open-source software projects. It was formed on January 22, 2007, by the merger of the Open Source Development Labs (OSDL) and the Free Standards Group (FSG), and operates as a member-funded "foundation of foundations" that provides legal, technical, marketing, training, and certification services to a portfolio of more than a thousand collaborative projects.[3]
The organization originally focused on accelerating the growth of the Linux operating system. Over the past decade it has expanded into a hub for almost every major area of modern infrastructure software, including cloud-native computing, blockchain, networking, security, web technologies, automotive, and energy. As of 2024, the foundation reports more than 1,000 corporate members and hundreds of hosted projects across these domains.[2]
The Linux Foundation has become a central institution in open-source software for artificial intelligence. It hosts the PyTorch Foundation, which took over stewardship of the PyTorch deep learning framework from Meta in 2022, as well as LF AI & Data, which hosts AI and data projects such as ONNX, MLflow, Kubeflow, Horovod, Milvus, and Delta Lake.[11] The Cloud Native Computing Foundation, launched as a Linux Foundation project in 2015, hosts Kubernetes and a wide ecosystem of cloud infrastructure projects that underpin modern AI deployments.[4] Since 2025 the foundation has also become a governance home for the open agentic AI stack: it hosts the Agent2Agent protocol contributed by Google in June 2025,[25] the Newton open-source robotics physics engine contributed by Disney Research, Google DeepMind, and NVIDIA in September 2025,[39] and through the Agentic AI Foundation formed in December 2025 it stewards Anthropic's Model Context Protocol, Block's goose agent framework, and OpenAI's AGENTS.md specification.[19] As Linux Foundation executive director Jim Zemlin put it when Google donated A2A, "By joining the Linux Foundation, A2A is ensuring the long-term neutrality, collaboration and governance that will unlock the next era of agent-to-agent powered productivity."[40]
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Founded | January 22, 2007 (merger of OSDL and FSG) |
| Predecessors | Open Source Development Labs (founded 2000); Free Standards Group (founded 2000) |
| Type | 501(c)(6) trade association (nonprofit) |
| Headquarters | San Francisco, California, United States |
| Executive Director | Jim Zemlin (since 2007) |
| Founding Linux Fellow | Linus Torvalds |
| Membership | More than 1,000 corporate members across Platinum, Gold, Silver, Associate, and Academic tiers |
| Revenue | About $311 million gross revenue projected for 2025, up from roughly $292 million in 2024[36] |
| Hosted Projects | Hundreds of collaborative projects spanning cloud, AI, blockchain, networking, security, automotive, and energy |
| Notable Sub-foundations | CNCF, LF AI & Data, PyTorch Foundation, OpenJS Foundation, Hyperledger (now part of LF Decentralized Trust), OpenSSF, Continuous Delivery Foundation, Academy Software Foundation, R Consortium |
| Major Events | Open Source Summit, KubeCon + CloudNativeCon, PyTorch Conference, AI_dev, Linux Plumbers Conference |
| Website | linuxfoundation.org |
The Linux Foundation traces its roots to two earlier nonprofits. The Open Source Development Labs (OSDL) was a global consortium founded in 2000 by IBM, Hewlett-Packard, Intel, and NEC to provide computing and test resources for Linux kernel developers.[2] In 2003 OSDL hired Linus Torvalds, the creator of Linux, so he could work on the kernel full-time outside any single company.[2] The Free Standards Group (FSG) was founded around the same period and became best known for the Linux Standard Base (LSB), a set of technical specifications intended to prevent fragmentation across Linux distributions. Jim Zemlin served as executive director of the FSG before the merger.[3]
On January 22, 2007, OSDL and the FSG announced their merger to form the Linux Foundation.[3] The combined organization launched with founding Platinum members Fujitsu, Hitachi, HP, IBM, Intel, NEC, Novell, and Oracle.[3] Jim Zemlin became executive director, a position he has held continuously since the foundation was created.[1] Linus Torvalds joined as a Linux Foundation Fellow, and the foundation has continued to sponsor him so he can work full-time on the Linux kernel.[2]
During its first years, the Linux Foundation concentrated on protecting and promoting Linux: managing the Linux trademark, organizing developer events such as the Linux Kernel Developers Summit and the Linux Plumbers Conference, and producing the annual Linux Kernel Development reports that documented contributions from companies and individuals.[2] In 2014 the foundation released its first massive open online course, "Introduction to Linux," through the edX platform, attracting roughly 300,000 enrollees in its initial run.[2]
The mid-2010s marked a strategic shift. Rather than remain narrowly focused on Linux, the foundation began acting as a neutral home for many other open-source projects, organized into independently governed sub-foundations sharing the parent's legal and operational infrastructure.
The key step was the announcement of the Cloud Native Computing Foundation (CNCF) on July 21, 2015.[4] CNCF launched alongside Kubernetes 1.0, which Google contributed as the seed project.[4] Founding members included AT&T, Cisco, Docker, eBay, Goldman Sachs, Google, Huawei, IBM, Intel, Red Hat, Twitter, and VMware.[4] CNCF rapidly became the largest sub-foundation under the Linux Foundation umbrella.
The Linux Foundation continued to add umbrella projects. Hyperledger, a blockchain umbrella, started in December 2015.[2] The R Consortium launched in 2015.[2] The Academy Software Foundation started in 2018. The Continuous Delivery Foundation (CDF) was announced in March 2019 with Jenkins, Jenkins X, Spinnaker, and Tekton as initial projects.[14] The OpenJS Foundation formed in March 2019 from the merger of the Node.js Foundation and the JS Foundation, becoming the home of Node.js, jQuery, Express, and other JavaScript projects.[13]
The foundation made its first explicit entry into artificial intelligence on March 26, 2018, with the launch of the LF Deep Learning Foundation, an umbrella for open-source AI, machine learning, and deep learning projects.[5] AT&T and Tech Mahindra contributed the initial Acumos AI platform, and founding members included Amdocs, AT&T, B.Yond, Baidu, Huawei, Nokia, Tech Mahindra, Tencent, Univa, and ZTE.[5] The umbrella was later renamed the LF AI Foundation as its project portfolio broadened.
Key AI projects joined in rapid succession. ONNX, the Open Neural Network Exchange originally created by Facebook and Microsoft in 2017, became an LF AI Graduate project on November 14, 2019.[6] Delta Lake was contributed by Databricks and announced as a Linux Foundation project in October 2019.[7] MLflow, also created at Databricks, joined the Linux Foundation on June 25, 2020.[8] Horovod, developed at Uber, graduated from LF AI in September 2020.
On October 26, 2020, LF AI merged with ODPi to form LF AI & Data, broadening the umbrella to include open-source data and analytics projects alongside AI and machine learning.[10] At the merger the combined foundation had 22 hosted projects, more than 60 member companies, and over 1,300 active developers.[10]
The Open Source Security Foundation (OpenSSF) launched on August 3, 2020, succeeding the Linux Foundation's earlier Core Infrastructure Initiative.[9] OpenSSF brought together GitHub, Google, IBM, JPMorgan Chase, Microsoft, NCC Group, the OWASP Foundation, Red Hat, and others to improve the security of open-source software, including the Sigstore code signing project, the OSV schema, and the Scorecard project for supply chain security.[9]
On September 12, 2022, Meta announced that it was transitioning PyTorch to the Linux Foundation under a newly formed PyTorch Foundation.[11] The move placed PyTorch, by then one of the most widely used deep learning frameworks, under neutral governance with a board including AMD, Amazon Web Services, Google Cloud, Meta, Microsoft Azure, and NVIDIA as founding members.[12] Dr. Ibrahim Haddad of the Linux Foundation became executive director of the PyTorch Foundation. At the time of the move PyTorch had over 2,400 contributors and was used by more than 18,000 organizations.[12]
In September 2022 the foundation also established Linux Foundation Europe with headquarters in Brussels.[2] Linux Foundation Japan and Linux Foundation India followed, with the India entity launching in December 2024.
The foundation expanded its AI footprint with the launch of the Generative AI Commons within LF AI & Data in September 2023.[16][21] Organized into work streams covering models and data, frameworks, applications, and education, the Generative AI Commons grew to more than 100 active members within months of its launch.[16]
In October 2024 the Linux Foundation reorganized its blockchain and distributed technology efforts under a new umbrella called LF Decentralized Trust, which absorbed the Hyperledger Foundation as well as related projects.[17] In December 2025 the foundation announced the Agentic AI Foundation, a new umbrella for open-source AI agent technologies, with founding contributions including Anthropic's Model Context Protocol, Block's Goose agent framework, and OpenAI's AGENTS.md specification.[19]
The foundation opened 2025 with the launch of Supporters of Chromium-Based Browsers on January 9, 2025, an initiative to fund open development in the Chromium browser ecosystem with backing from Google, Meta, Microsoft, and Opera.[32] On March 12, 2025, the Open Infrastructure Foundation, steward of the OpenStack cloud platform and a community of more than 110,000 individuals in 187 countries, announced its intent to join the Linux Foundation;[27] the combination closed in June 2025, bringing the open-source standard bearers for operating systems (Linux), cloud infrastructure (OpenStack), and container orchestration (Kubernetes) under one organization.[28] Linux Foundation Europe launched the NeoNephos Foundation on March 31, 2025, to advance European digital sovereignty and open cloud infrastructure, with founding members including Deutsche Telekom, SAP, and STACKIT.[33]
AI dominated the foundation's growth in 2025. In May 2025 the PyTorch Foundation restructured into an umbrella foundation and accepted vLLM and DeepSpeed as its first hosted projects beyond PyTorch itself.[22] Ray, the distributed computing framework created at UC Berkeley and developed commercially by Anyscale, joined on October 22, 2025, giving the foundation an integrated open-source AI compute stack spanning model development (PyTorch), inference (vLLM), and distributed execution (Ray).[23] Google contributed its Agent2Agent protocol for communication between AI agents on June 23, 2025, at Open Source Summit North America, with Amazon Web Services, Cisco, Microsoft, Salesforce, SAP, and ServiceNow among the founding participants.[25] On September 29, 2025, the foundation also took on robotics simulation as a hosted domain, announcing the Newton open-source physics engine contributed by Disney Research, Google DeepMind, and NVIDIA to accelerate open robot learning.[39] At KubeCon + CloudNativeCon North America on November 11, 2025, CNCF launched the Certified Kubernetes AI Conformance Program, a community-defined standard for running AI workloads portably across Kubernetes platforms.[31]
The agentic push culminated on December 9, 2025, when the foundation formed the Agentic AI Foundation (AAIF) with Amazon Web Services, Anthropic, Block, Bloomberg, Cloudflare, Google, Microsoft, and OpenAI as platinum members, positioning it as the neutral home for open agentic AI standards.[19][26] Expansion continued into 2026: the x402 Foundation, announced on April 2, 2026, governs the x402 payments protocol contributed by Coinbase, which embeds payments into web interactions so that AI agents, APIs, and applications can transact value,[34] and the OpenSharing Project, announced on June 10, 2026, evolves the Delta Sharing protocol contributed by Databricks into a vendor-neutral standard for exchanging AI models, agent skills, and unstructured data across platforms.[35]
The Linux Foundation's stated mission is to support open-source communities by providing collaborative infrastructure, governance, and shared services. It is funded primarily by membership fees and sponsorship revenue from companies, with smaller contributions from event registrations, training, and certification.
Most projects hosted by the foundation operate under their own technical governance, typically a Technical Steering Committee or technical oversight body, while sharing common operational services. The Linux Foundation provides:
Sub-foundations such as CNCF, LF AI & Data, and the PyTorch Foundation each maintain their own governing boards, technical bodies, member structures, and financial reporting, while operating under the legal and administrative shell of the parent foundation.
The Linux Foundation acts as a holding organization for many specialized umbrella foundations, each hosting multiple projects. The following table summarizes major sub-foundations and the principal projects they host.
| Sub-foundation | Founded | Domain | Notable projects |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cloud Native Computing Foundation (CNCF) | 2015 | Cloud-native infrastructure | Kubernetes, Prometheus, Envoy, etcd, Helm, OpenTelemetry, Argo, Linkerd, Jaeger, cert-manager, KubeEdge, Istio[20] |
| LF AI & Data | 2018 (as LF Deep Learning); renamed 2020 | AI, machine learning, and data | ONNX, MLflow, Kubeflow, Horovod, Milvus, Delta Lake, Acumos, Pyro, Flyte, Adversarial Robustness Toolbox, AI Explainability 360, OpenLineage |
| PyTorch Foundation | September 2022 | Deep learning framework | PyTorch, TorchServe, ExecuTorch and ecosystem projects |
| OpenJS Foundation | March 2019 | JavaScript and web | Node.js, jQuery, Express, webpack, Appium, Dojo, Node-RED |
| Hyperledger Foundation (within LF Decentralized Trust from 2024) | December 2015 | Blockchain and distributed ledger | Fabric, Iroha, Indy, Besu, Sawtooth (archived 2024) |
| Open Source Security Foundation (OpenSSF) | August 2020 | Open-source software security | Sigstore, OSV, Scorecard, Alpha-Omega |
| Continuous Delivery Foundation (CDF) | March 2019 | CI/CD and DevOps | Jenkins, Jenkins X, Spinnaker, Tekton |
| GraphQL Foundation | 2018 | API query language | GraphQL specification and reference implementations |
| Academy Software Foundation | 2018 | Visual effects and motion picture software | OpenColorIO, OpenEXR, OpenVDB, USD |
| R Consortium | 2015 | R programming language | R-hub, R community projects |
| Linux Foundation Networking (LFN) | 2018 | Open networking | ONAP, OpenDaylight, FD.io, Tungsten Fabric |
| Zephyr Project | 2016 | Real-time operating system | Zephyr RTOS for embedded devices |
| Automotive Grade Linux (AGL) | 2014 | Automotive software | AGL Unified Code Base |
| LF Energy | 2018 | Power grid and energy | OpenEEmeter, GXF, OperatorFabric[38] |
| LF Public Health | 2020 | Public health software | COVID Shield, COVID Green |
| LF Climate Finance Foundation | 2020 | Climate finance analytics | OS-Climate, ITR Tool |
| Overture Maps Foundation | 2022 | Open map data | Overture map data releases |
| OpenInfra Foundation | 2012 (as OpenStack Foundation); joined the Linux Foundation in 2025 | Open infrastructure | OpenStack, Kata Containers, StarlingX, Zuul[28] |
| Agentic AI Foundation (AAIF) | December 2025 | Open AI agent standards and tooling | Model Context Protocol, goose, AGENTS.md[19] |
In addition to these umbrellas, the Linux Foundation hosts many individual projects directly, including the Linux kernel itself.
The Linux Foundation's portfolio of AI projects is one of the largest concentrations of open-source AI software under any single nonprofit umbrella.
The PyTorch Foundation was created in September 2022 to host the PyTorch deep learning framework that Meta had developed and released as open source in 2016.[11] PyTorch is one of the two dominant deep learning frameworks in research and production, alongside TensorFlow, and powers the training and inference of many large language models and other foundation models.
The PyTorch Foundation hosts the core framework along with a growing ecosystem of related projects.
| Project | Purpose |
|---|---|
| PyTorch | Core deep learning framework with eager and graph execution |
| TorchServe | Production model serving framework for PyTorch |
| ExecuTorch | On-device runtime for PyTorch models on mobile and edge |
| TorchX | Job launcher for distributed training |
| Captum | Model interpretability library |
| vLLM | High-throughput inference and serving engine for large language models; hosted since May 2025[22] |
| DeepSpeed | Distributed training optimization library originally developed at Microsoft; hosted since May 2025[22] |
| Ray | Distributed computing framework for scaling AI workloads, contributed by Anyscale in October 2025[23] |
The foundation operates under a governing board with founding members AMD, Amazon Web Services, Google Cloud, Meta, Microsoft Azure, and NVIDIA, expanded with additional Premier and General members in subsequent years.[12]
In June 2024 the PyTorch Foundation announced Matt White, general manager of AI at the Linux Foundation, as its new executive director.[24] In May 2025 it expanded into an umbrella foundation able to host additional projects across the AI lifecycle, admitting vLLM, the inference and serving engine created at the University of California, Berkeley, and DeepSpeed, the distributed training library started at Microsoft, as its first two hosted projects.[22] Ray followed on October 22, 2025; at the time Ray had more than 39,000 GitHub stars and over 237 million downloads.[23] The Linux Foundation and the PyTorch Foundation also released the OpenMDW (Open Model, Data and Weights) license in 2025, a permissive license designed to cover model weights, code, documentation, and data together;[29] OpenMDW-1.1 followed on May 28, 2026, with NVIDIA adopting it for future releases of its Cosmos, Isaac GR00T, Ising, and Nemotron open model families.[30]
LF AI & Data is the Linux Foundation's broad umbrella for open-source AI, machine learning, and data projects. It evolved from the LF Deep Learning Foundation launched in March 2018, was renamed LF AI, and merged with ODPi in October 2020 to form LF AI & Data.[10] The umbrella hosts dozens of projects across the AI and data lifecycle.
| Project | Origin | Function |
|---|---|---|
| ONNX | Facebook + Microsoft (2017) | Open format for representing machine learning models, enabling interoperability between frameworks |
| MLflow | Databricks (2018) | Platform for managing the end-to-end machine learning lifecycle |
| Kubeflow | Machine learning toolkit for Kubernetes | |
| Horovod | Uber | Distributed deep learning training framework |
| Milvus | Zilliz | Open-source vector database for AI applications |
| Delta Lake | Databricks | Storage layer that brings ACID transactions to data lakes |
| Flyte | Lyft | Workflow orchestration platform for machine learning and data |
| Acumos AI | AT&T and Tech Mahindra | Platform for building, sharing, and deploying AI models |
| Pyro | Uber | Probabilistic programming language built on PyTorch |
| Adversarial Robustness Toolbox | IBM | Library for adversarial machine learning defenses |
| AI Explainability 360 | IBM | Toolkit for explainable AI |
| AI Fairness 360 | IBM | Toolkit for detecting and mitigating bias in ML models |
| OpenLineage | Various | Open standard for metadata and lineage collection in data pipelines |
| KServe | IBM, Google, Bloomberg, NVIDIA, Seldon | Standardized model inference platform on Kubernetes |
| Egeria | Various | Open metadata management for data |
| Datapractices | Various | Manifesto and project for ethical and effective data practices |
Projects in LF AI & Data progress through a maturity lifecycle of Sandbox, Incubation, and Graduation, with graduated projects subject to additional criteria around community size, governance, and adoption.
The Generative AI Commons launched within LF AI & Data in September 2023 as a focused initiative on open-source generative AI.[16][21] Led by Matt White as director, it organizes work into four streams covering models and data, frameworks, applications, and education. Within months of launch the initiative had attracted more than 100 active members and was profiled at the foundation's AI_dev conference series.[16]
The Open Platform for Enterprise AI (OPEA), launched within LF AI & Data, provides reference implementations and components for retrieval-augmented generation and other enterprise AI workloads.[15] The Agentic AI Foundation, announced in December 2025, focuses on open-source AI agent technologies and includes contributions such as Anthropic's Model Context Protocol, Block's Goose agent framework, and OpenAI's AGENTS.md specification, with founding support from AWS, Bloomberg, Cloudflare, and Google.[19] At the Agentic AI Foundation's launch the Model Context Protocol had more than 10,000 published servers, and AGENTS.md had been adopted by more than 60,000 open-source projects and tools including GitHub Copilot, Cursor, and Gemini CLI.[19] TechCrunch characterized the new foundation as an effort by rival AI developers to standardize the AI agent era under neutral governance.[26] The separate Agent2Agent (A2A) protocol project, formed in June 2025 when Google transferred the A2A specification, SDKs, and developer tooling to the foundation, develops an open standard that lets AI agents from different vendors discover each other, share context, and collaborate on tasks; more than 100 companies supported the protocol at the time of the transfer.[25]
Newton is an open-source, GPU-accelerated physics engine for robotics simulation that the Linux Foundation announced on September 29, 2025, as a contribution from Disney Research, Google DeepMind, and NVIDIA.[39] Newton is built on NVIDIA Warp and the OpenUSD standard, and it is designed to enable faster, more scalable simulations that lower the barrier to robot learning, supporting contact-rich behaviors such as walking on snow or gravel and manipulating delicate objects like cups and fruit.[39] The project is released under the Apache 2.0 license and hosts its code in the newton-physics organization on GitHub, with early participants including the Technical University of Munich, Peking University, the robotics company Lightwheel, and the simulation company Style3D.[39] Rev Lebaredian, NVIDIA's vice president of Omniverse and simulation technology, said that "Newton brings together GPU acceleration, differentiable physics and open standards like OpenUSD into an open source platform for robotics."[39] Placing Newton under the Linux Foundation keeps it vendor neutral, which Jim Zemlin described as "an important step forward for scaling collaborative robotics simulation that accelerates development, reduces costs" across the industry.[39]
The Linux Foundation operates one of the largest portfolios of open-source events in the industry, organizing flagship conferences across multiple regions every year.
| Event | Description |
|---|---|
| Open Source Summit (North America, Europe, Japan) | Umbrella conference covering Linux kernel, cloud, AI, embedded, and other open-source topics |
| KubeCon + CloudNativeCon (NA, Europe, Japan, India, China) | CNCF flagship conference for Kubernetes and cloud-native technologies |
| PyTorch Conference | Annual conference for the PyTorch community |
| AI_dev: Open Source GenAI and ML Summit | Conference series focused on open-source generative AI and machine learning |
| Linux Plumbers Conference | Annual conference for kernel and core Linux subsystem developers |
| Linux Storage, Filesystem, and Memory Management Summit | Specialized kernel developer event |
| ONE Summit | Combined event for Linux Foundation Networking, Edge, IoT, and Access |
| Open Source Security Summit | OpenSSF flagship event |
| Hyperledger Global Forum | Major event for Hyperledger and decentralized trust technologies |
| Embedded Open Source Summit | Conference focused on embedded Linux and open-source embedded software |
In 2024 several events were combined, including a joint KubeCon + CloudNativeCon + Open Source Summit + AI_dev event in Hong Kong in August 2024.
The 2026 events program, announced on January 22, 2026, anticipates more than 120,000 attendees across the foundation's global event portfolio and adds new AI-focused events, including MCP Dev Summit in North America and Europe, Agentics Day: MCP + Agents Europe, Cloud Native AI + Kubeflow Day Europe, and PyTorch Conference Europe, while integrating the AI_dev summit series into the global Open Source Summit events.[37]
Linux Foundation Education offers a substantial catalog of courses and professional certifications, often delivered jointly with edX, Coursera, or partner sub-foundations.[18] The certifications target system administrators, developers, security engineers, and Kubernetes operators.
| Certification | Focus |
|---|---|
| Linux Foundation Certified IT Associate (LFCA) | Entry-level IT and Linux fundamentals |
| Linux Foundation Certified System Administrator (LFCS) | Linux system administration |
| Linux Foundation Certified Engineer (LFCE) | Advanced Linux engineering |
| Certified Kubernetes Administrator (CKA) | Cluster operation and administration of Kubernetes |
| Certified Kubernetes Application Developer (CKAD) | Designing and building Kubernetes applications |
| Certified Kubernetes Security Specialist (CKS) | Kubernetes security |
| Kubernetes and Cloud Native Associate (KCNA) | Entry-level Kubernetes and cloud-native knowledge |
| Kubernetes and Cloud Native Security Associate (KCSA) | Entry-level Kubernetes security |
| Open FinOps Certified Practitioner | Cloud financial management |
| Hyperledger Certified Service Provider (HCSP) | Blockchain services on Hyperledger |
The foundation also runs one of the largest open-source MOOC programs through edX, including the introductory "Introduction to Linux" course, which had roughly 300,000 enrollees in its first run after launching in March 2014, and "Introduction to Kubernetes," which has introduced many thousands of learners to container orchestration.[2]
Membership in the Linux Foundation is organized into tiers that reflect organization size and financial commitment. Members vote on board representation and strategic direction; non-member contributors can still participate in individual projects, since technical contributions are governed by each project's own policies.
| Tier | Typical contributor | Indicative annual fee | Benefits |
|---|---|---|---|
| Platinum | Largest technology corporations | Approximately $500,000 per year | Board seat, top-level visibility, priority input on strategic direction |
| Gold | Mid to large technology vendors | Tens to low hundreds of thousands of dollars | Indirect board representation, marketing visibility |
| Silver | Smaller corporate participants | Scales by company size | Standard member benefits and event participation |
| Associate | Government agencies and nonprofits | No fee for qualifying organizations | Participation rights aligned with mission |
| Academic | Universities and research institutions | No fee | Participation rights for educational organizations |
The Linux Foundation reports more than 1,000 corporate members across these tiers as of 2024.[2] Many organizations participate in multiple sub-foundations, each with its own membership structure and separate fees.
Founding Platinum members of the original Linux Foundation in 2007 included Fujitsu, Hitachi, HP, IBM, Intel, NEC, Novell, and Oracle.[3] The Platinum tier has since expanded to include companies such as Cisco, Ericsson, Huawei, Meta, Microsoft, Qualcomm, Red Hat, Samsung, and Google, with the roster changing as organizations renew or join.[2]
The Linux Foundation operates a global staff supporting hundreds of projects and tens of thousands of contributors. Revenue is generated primarily from membership fees, with additional income from events, training and certification, and research. As of 2024 the foundation reports more than 1,000 active corporate members across all umbrellas.[2] Each major sub-foundation maintains its own members, budget, and event revenue, with the parent organization providing shared services and consolidated oversight.
In 2015 the foundation estimated the total economic value of the development costs of its hosted projects at five billion United States dollars, a figure that has grown substantially as projects such as Kubernetes, PyTorch, and Hyperledger expanded.[2]
The foundation's 2025 annual report, released in December 2025, projected gross revenue of about $311 million for calendar year 2025, the first year above the $300 million mark and up from roughly $292 million in 2024.[36] Membership dues and donations (about $133 million), project services (about $83 million), event sponsorships and registrations (about $58 million), and training and certification (about $29 million) made up the largest revenue lines.[36]
Jim Zemlin has served as executive director of the Linux Foundation since its formation in 2007.[1] Before the merger he was executive director of the Free Standards Group.[3] Under his leadership the foundation expanded from a Linux focused organization to a multi-domain umbrella for open-source software.
The Linux Foundation's board of directors includes seats appointed by Platinum members, elected positions from the Gold and Silver tiers, and seats reserved for Linux kernel developers nominated by the kernel community. Sub-foundations such as CNCF, LF AI & Data, the PyTorch Foundation, OpenJS, and OpenSSF each have their own governing boards and technical oversight committees.
Linus Torvalds, the creator of the Linux kernel, holds the title of Linux Foundation Fellow, a position that allows him to work full-time on the kernel without pressure from any single corporate employer.[2] The Linux Foundation has named additional Fellows over the years for sustained contributions to the ecosystem.
The Linux Foundation has become one of the most influential institutions in open-source software, providing a stable nonprofit home for projects that underpin the modern internet, cloud computing, and increasingly artificial intelligence. The Linux kernel runs on the majority of servers, mobile devices, and embedded systems worldwide. CNCF projects, especially Kubernetes, have become the de facto standard for container orchestration in production.
In artificial intelligence the foundation's role expanded sharply after 2018. Hosting PyTorch under a neutral foundation has been seen by many in the AI community as an important step toward reducing single-vendor risk in deep learning frameworks.[11] The collection of MLOps and data tools under LF AI & Data, including ONNX, MLflow, Kubeflow, Horovod, Milvus, and Delta Lake, has provided a centralized location for many of the open-source building blocks used to train, deploy, and serve modern machine learning systems.
Observers have noted both strengths and criticisms of the foundation's model. The foundation provides legal and operational scaffolding that allows projects to focus on technical work and offers a neutral venue where competing companies collaborate on shared infrastructure. Critics observe that the membership-fee model places governance influence in the hands of large corporations, that the proliferation of sub-foundations can be confusing to outside participants, and that positioning is sometimes more aligned with vendor interests than with end users or independent maintainers. The Linux Foundation has nonetheless remained a central institution for the open-source ecosystem, including the open-source layer of the modern artificial intelligence stack.