Quick Facts
- Category: Open Source
- Published: 2026-05-01 10:22:18
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Breaking: Open Source Maintainers Now Paid to Shape Internet Standards
The Sovereign Tech Agency (STA) today announced a groundbreaking pilot program, Sovereign Tech Standards, that will pay open source maintainers to participate in the development of core internet standards.

Selected maintainers will receive a monthly stipend between €4,800 and €5,200 to contribute roughly 10 hours per week to standards work at the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF), World Wide Web Consortium (W3C), or International Organization for Standardization (ISO).
“This is a direct response to a glaring imbalance,” said Dr. Anja Klinger, director of the Sovereign Tech Agency. “The people who build the software that relies on these standards have been locked out of the rooms where they are defined. We are changing that.”
Program Details
The pilot will support a cohort of up to 10 maintainers from mid-June 2026 through June 2027. The stipend covers not only time but also SDO participation fees, travel to in-person meetings, and onboarding costs.
Eligible applicants must be active maintainers of an open source project whose work relates to IETF, W3C, or ISO standards. Prior experience with standards bodies is not required, and there are no geographic restrictions.
Why This Matters Now
The agency conducted a survey of maintainers who already rely on these standards daily. It found that while most use them extensively, very few could afford to participate in their development long-term. Large tech companies routinely send representatives, but independent developers lack the time and resources.
“Maintainers know exactly where specifications break down in practice,” said Lena Schwartz, a senior policy advisor at the STA. “Their absence from standards bodies means the internet’s technical foundation is built without real-world feedback from those who implement it.”
Background: The Access Problem
Participation in IETF, W3C, and ISO is formally open, but the cost is prohibitive. Attending meetings, tracking working group discussions, and contributing meaningfully requires significant time and financial investment – something most independent developers cannot sustain.

This has created a representation gap: standards are shaped almost exclusively by employees of large corporations, while the broader open source community that builds on them has little voice.
What This Means
The program signals a shift toward directly compensating open source contributors for their expertise in governance roles. If successful, it could become a model for other agencies and foundations seeking to democratize internet standards development.
For maintainers, it offers a rare paid pathway to influence the very protocols and specifications they depend on. For the internet, it promises more pragmatic, implementer-informed standards that may better serve the diverse ecosystem of open source software.
How to Apply
Applications are open now and close May 19, 2026 at 11:59 PM CEST. Selection is based on the foundational importance of the relevant standard, the applicant’s proposed work, whether their perspective is currently missing from the working group, and their background as a maintainer.
Review and selection will take place during May 2026, with applicants notified in June. The program kicks off at the end of June 2026.
Apply Now — Additional information is available on the program’s official page.