Michel Tricot is Cofounder and CEO of Airbyte.
We talk about open source software in the wrong way.
The conversation always comes back to cost savings, licensing fees and avoiding vendor lock-in. These things matter, but they’re not why open source continues to win and drive the biggest innovations in technology. It has to do with the fundamentally transparent nature of open-source technology and the rapid adoption that it empowers.
The Strategic Value Of Transparency
The true value of open source lies in its ability to drive innovation through transparency. When code is auditable and accessible, organizations achieve complete visibility into what’s happening with their data and infrastructure. This is far more valuable than just saving costs.
This matters more than ever in the AI era. As companies race to integrate AI into their products and operations, they’re making critical decisions about which tools and platforms will handle their most valuable asset: internal first-party data. Closed systems force you to take vendors at their word.
For security and compliance teams, this distinction is everything. Properly auditing a black box is impossible. Validating claims about data handling, privacy controls or security measures requires access to the codebase. Open source removes that barrier.
Most importantly, you can deploy open-source software in your own controlled environment. This allows safe experimentation within your organization’s security parameters. With transparency and sovereignty built into the very nature of open-source software, it has an unparalleled advantage when it comes to rapid innovation.
The Innovation Advantage
Here’s where transparency becomes innovation fuel: When any software engineer can read, understand and modify the tools they use, experimentation becomes cheap and fast.
In a closed system, trying something new means vendor negotiations, proof-of-concept agreements and lengthy security reviews of systems that can’t be fully inspected. Innovation moves at the pace of contracts and compliance committees.
With open source, testing radical approaches and validating ideas happens before involving procurement or taking on meaningful risk. The feedback loop from idea to validation shrinks from months to days.
This is why the most innovative companies in AI are betting big on open source. Mistral was one of the first companies to provide open-source large language model (LLM) weights, and DeepSeek and OpenAI soon followed suit. They saw the advantage that open-source software can provide engineers working on cutting-edge AI applications.
The best engineers don’t want to work in walled gardens. They want to work where they can access and augment the code, allowing them to build without barriers. Open source gives them that freedom, which means it attracts the best talent and fosters the generation of the best ideas. And more importantly, this allows those engineers to contribute these fixes to the community, creating a virtuous cycle of organic innovation.
The Future Is Built In The Open
Some ideas are too big for one person or one company to own. AI is one of those ideas.
We don’t know what the final version of this technology will be. We can’t predict all the ways it will reshape how we work, create and solve problems. And we definitely can’t trust a single entity to make those decisions for everyone else. That’s where open source comes in.
This has to be built together, in the open.
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