Sequoia Capital, a venture capital firm from Silicon Valley, has launched the Sequoia Open Source Fellowship. This program plans to fund up to three developers each year. It allows them to work full-time on their projects without worrying about money and without giving up any ownership of their work.
In 2023 their first and only Fellow was Sebastián Ramírez Montaño who created FastAPI, an open source tool that allows developers to create applications quickly and maintain them easily.
This initiative addresses the problem of not enough funding in the open source community, a problem made clear by major security issues in the past.
Open source software development is important for technology, yet, developers often have to balance their open source work with jobs that pay, leading to a lack of funding and support. The Sequoia fellowship aims to close this gap by giving developers money to cover their living costs for up to a year, so they can focus on their open source projects.
The fellowship is available to any developer working on an open source project, with ongoing application acceptance. Sequoia wants to support projects that are widely used and make a difference, showing the importance of open source software in technology. By funding these projects, Sequoia not only helps the wider tech community but also follows its strategy of investing in companies rooted in open source, like MongoDB, Confluent, and Temporal.
Sequoia’s move is part of a larger trend where tech companies and venture capital firms offer grants and funding to support open source development. These efforts aim to make the software supply chain safer and recognise the importance of open source contributions to technology.