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Hi, I'm Edd. I work as a technical program management leader inside
GitHub. I work primarily on Copilot, and security. I still get to mess
around with code in my spare time, where Clojure and Rust are my footguns
of choice.
Me and open source
My journey in open source started some time before GitHub existed, so
you're unlikely to find too much in the contribution graphs: most of
my coding stopped around ten years ago, and I contribute in other ways
these days. The benefit of this README is that I can tell you about
it—non-code contributions are vital for modern open source!
In a nutshell: I created my first open source project in 1999, was
lucky enough to chair the O'Reilly Open Source Convention from some
years, led open source programs at Google for a while, and have been
involved in a variety of CNCF open source projects. You can find more
of my historical contributions at the bottom of this document.
Places to reach me
Wilder
Thoughts, my weekly newsletter on tech, productivity and work
Keyoxide
-- this link asserts my identity, and will also let you send me
PGP-encrypted email
Some recent work
In 2025 I joined the staff of GitHub, where I am part of the
Technical Program Management leadership. I lead the team of
TPMs focused on Copilot.
Most recently at Sysdig, I led open source
ecosystem. As a company Sysdig contributes significantly to the
Falco project, as well as maintaining other
projects such as sysdig and
WireShark. Here's why you might want
to work with
me—though
I'm no longer at Sysdig, you can find out about my management
philosophy here.
While at Google, I did a lot of working building the
TensorFlow and
Kubeflow communities. When I became the
leader of the 20 person open source program manager group at Google,
my team also looked after engagement with
projects like Go,
Kubernetes, Istio and
Knative, as well as Google Summer of Code
and other amazing community endeavors.
Interesting historical projects
If you've known for over ten years, you might not know I changed my
name. Historic OSS
contributions all use my previous name.
I created the DOAP vocabulary
for describing software projects. This went on to become the
foundation for SPDX.
I was a Debian maintainer, principally looking after the Bluetooth
integration
I was a GNOME contributor, agains writing Bluetooth UI tools such as
PhoneManager