+1

Thanks,
-Nick

On Thu, Sep 4, 2025 at 6:26 PM Robert Newson <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> +1
>
> Regards,
>
> Robert Newson
>
>
>
> > On 4 Sep 2025, at 09:07, Ronny Berndt <[email protected]> wrote:
> >
> > Dear community,
> >
> > I would like to propose that we join the Sovereign Tech Resilience Program
> > [1]
> > that CouchDB benefit of modernisations of some of its parts to ensure
> > continued speedy
> > development including responding to critical security vulnerabilities.
> >
> > I would submit the following application (by lazy consensus) if no-one
> > objects
> > until Sunday, 25-09-07 23:59 (UTC+1).
> >
> > On behalf of the CouchDB PMC,
> > Ronny
> >
> > CouchDB STA Bug Resilience Program Application
> >
> > Category:  Join the Sovereign Tech Resilience Program
> > Application Name:  Apache CouchDB
> > Project title:  Apache CouchDB
> > Link to project website:  https://couchdb.apache.org
> > Link to project repository:  https://github.com/apache/couchdb
> >
> > Where is your open source technology project being used (describe all user
> > bases)? (300 words):
> > CouchDB is used in all areas a database can be useful. It covers setups
> > from single-server databases for applications, to multi-node clusters for
> > large-scale and fault-tolerant setups for larger systems. CouchDB is famed
> > for its ease of use and operation and is used by non-profits and fortune
> > 500 companies alike. The one feature that sets CouchDB apart from other
> > databases is its unique data replication feature that allows for very
> > flexible geo-distributed operations. Together with Apache PouchDB it
> > provides the backbone for one of the most mature open source offline-first
> > and local-first set of applications.
> >
> > On the large-scale end, CouchDB is used by national broadcasters, triple A
> > game companies, global freight shipping operators, country-wide supermarket
> > logistics, in big-data sience and research as well has many large-scale
> > healthcare infrastructures. On the smaller end, in the non-profit sector,
> > CouchDB powers the search and rescue software used by SeaWatch e.V. that
> > has been adapted to help with humanitarian relief efforts in war zones. It
> > also is the backbone of multiple medical solutions that operate worldwide
> > to provide healthcare and vaccines to regions with little to no network
> > infrastructure. It played a pivotal role in the 2013-2016 Ebola response in
> > West Africa, provided the core infrastructure for all COVID vaccinations in
> > Bavaria when the first vaccines became available. It is being used in
> > agriculture and farming and it supports service technicians of all
> > varieties in the field.
> >
> > Why do you consider your open source technology project to be relevant and
> > critical? (300 words):
> > Derived from the obvious usefulness of the use-cases listed above, it is
> > obvious to us that CouchDB is a piece of load-bearing infrastructure for
> > countless humanitarian projects. Its benefit to businesses with large-scale
> > storage needs is also clearly demonstrated. Being able to choose an open
> > source and open governance project is critical for either type of
> > organisation and provides significant value. Every day, more people are
> > choosing CouchDB for these use-cases and we consider it important to ensure
> > its continued development.
> >
> > Should CouchDB cease to exist, it would cause considerable humanitarian and
> > economic upheaval for the organisations that have already chosen it for
> > critical infrastructure with no open-source and open-governance alternative
> > available. It would also close the opportunity for future projects and
> > products to benefit from its unique feature set.
> >
> > How does your open source technology benefit the public interest? (300
> > words):
> > CouchDB’s ease-of-use allows people with little technology knowledge to
> > build reliable and sovereign data management solutions. For example it is
> > at the core of an architecture to allow the Iranian diaspora relay
> > non-censored news to people in Iran. Equally, the nature of
> > offline-first/local-first applications, especially in emergency
> > first-responder and medical fields is an essential piece of infrastructure
> > for scenarios where a reliable internet connectivity cannot be guaranteed.
> > It has been used in building inspection software for avalanche protection
> > routines in the Alps, where even the most modern mobile or satellite
> > network technology struggles to function at all.
> >
> > For technology experts, it provides an long-term stable and open source
> > development platform that allows to build globally spanning, highly
> > available big-data solutions.
> >
> > Please describe the history and state of development of your open source
> > technology (500 words):
> > CouchDB has been an Apache Software Foundation project since 2008 and has
> > had a steady release progress since. New feature versions come out roughly
> > once or twice a year with security and bugfix versions dotted in between.
> > Its current main release series is 3.x. with plans and development for 4.x
> > in progress.
> >
> > It is developed by a dedicated team of about ten people, some of which get
> > at least paid part time to work on CouchDB, with hundreds contributing
> > along the way.
> >
> > CouchDB’s core dependencies are the programming language Erlang, the
> > JavaScript engines Mozilla SpiderMonkey and QuickJS and the Unicode library
> > IBM Components for Unicode (icu).
> >
> > Which Sovereign Tech Resilience services are you interested in?:
> > [x] Direct Contributions
> >
> > Describe why your project needs those services? (optional) (300 words):
> > CouchDB can benefit of modernisations of some of its parts to ensure
> > continued speedy development including responding to critical security
> > vulnerabilities. The existing team currently focusses on feature
> > development and the STA funded work would make it easier for the team to do
> > that work as well as make it easier for newcomers to join the project.
> >
> > One extra note: The CouchDB Project Management Committee Chair Jan Lehnardt
> > is also a CEO at Neighbourhoodie Software, the implementation partner for
> > the Bug Resilience Program. To avoid a conflict of interest, Jan Lehnardt
> > is excusing himself from any official CouchDB project decisions with
> > regards to this application. Should additional statements or affidavits be
> > required, we are happy to provide them.
> >
> > [1] https://www.sovereign.tech/
>

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