WASHINGTON, D.C. — June 8, 2023 – The Linux Foundation, the nonprofit organization enabling mass innovation through open source, and the National Spectrum Consortium (NSC) — which provides the United States government direct access to almost 400 members of U.S. industry and academia who work with systems, sub-systems, components and the enabling technologies related to the use of the electromagnetic spectrum or the information that rides on it — announced formal collaboration to create opportunities to develop Open RAN software prototypes and demonstrations. The two organizations have signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) to solidify their working relationship and commitment to minimizing barriers to further R&D necessary for OpenRAN acceleration within the United States. More open and flexible wireless networks ultimately increase vendor diversity and competition, prevent vendor lock-in, increase innovation in wireless networking technology, lower deployment and operational costs, and even increase security and energy efficiency.
“We are eager to work with the NSC in creating a stable, open, secure reference stack for Open RAN,” said Arpit Joshipura, general manager, Networking, Edge & IoT, the Linux Foundation. “By combining resources, we’ll accelerate access to Open RAN and wireless technology across the United States across verticals and into government, academia, and small business. Our robust open source development infrastructure across the networking stack and within the cybersecurity space is a natural partner for the NSC’s spectrum development work already in play.”
“We are likewise excited to formalize our relationship with the Linux Foundation,” said Joe Kochan, executive director of the NSC. “When it comes to tackling tough wireless issues across industries, as our two organizations do, two heads are better than one. We look forward to our ongoing collaboration on Open RAN R&D and other wireless and networking innovation.”
Top-line goals of the collaboration include:
Specific Linux Foundation projects involved in the collaboration include LF Networking and OpenSSF.
About the National Spectrum Consortium
The National Spectrum Consortium (NSC) provides the Government direct access to almost 400 members of U.S. industry and academia who work with systems, sub-systems, components and the enabling technologies related to the use of the electromagnetic spectrum or the information that rides on it. The majority of Consortium members are small businesses, and over 75% are principally focused on commercial markets. Membership spans the continuum of basic research through large-scale production, enabling the formation of purpose-built teams tailored to the development phase(s) of most interest to the sponsor. www.nationalspectrumconsortium.org
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