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Open source software is code that anyone can view, use, modify, or share, encouraging collaboration and forming the base for many larger applications.
Open Source (MIT License) software allows anyone to use, modify, and share code freely, fostering transparency and collaboration in development.
Open Source Intelligence (OSINT) is the collection and analysis of information from publicly available sources, like social media and public records, for investigations.
Open Source Intelligence (OSINT) is the collection and analysis of information from publicly accessible sources to support security, investigations, or research.
An open source library is a freely available collection of code that anyone can use, modify, or share, often hosted on public repositories.
An open source project is software with publicly available code, allowing anyone to view, modify, or distribute it—sometimes exploited for malware.
Open Source Software is computer code made publicly available for anyone to inspect, modify, and share, often developed by global communities.
Open speakers are tiny wearable audio devices that deliver sound without blocking outside noise, letting users stay aware of their surroundings.
Open Standards like BPMN, CMMN, and DMN are public frameworks that let different software systems work together, reducing dependence on any single vendor.
Open VSX is an open source marketplace for Visual Studio Code extensions, managed by the Eclipse Foundation for community-driven development.