21 Jan 2026
Drupal.org aggregator
Drupal Association blog: Join Drupal for a week of innovation at EU Open Source Week 2026
The Drupal Community will have a large showing at EU Open Source Week 2026 in Brussels. You are invited to join Drupal Association board members Baddy Sonja Breidert, Tiffany Farriss, Sachiko Muto, Imre Gmelig, and Alex Moreno at the following events throughout the week. Drupal Association CEO Tim Doyle, CTO Tim Lehnen, and Head of Global Programs, Meghan Harrell will also be in attendance.
Happening from 26 January to 1 February, 2026 in Brussels, the global open source community is gearing up for the EU Open Source Week. We are proud to highlight the significant presence of the Drupal project throughout the week.
Here's where you can find Drupal making an impact:
Play to impact - Drupal AI Hackathon: The event will kick-off online on 22 January 2026 and further will be continued during the EU Open Source Week on 27 and 28 January 2026. During the two-day event, developers, designers and other digital innovators will work side by side to create smarter, faster and more open digital solutions built with Drupal and AI.
Drupal Pivot: A 1.5-day, peer-led un-conference, to be held on 27 and 28 January 2026, for Drupal agency CEOs, founders, and senior executives to collaboratively explore the most pressing strategic questions shaping the future of the Drupal business ecosystem.
Drupal EU Government Day: A unique free one-day event, scheduled for 29 January 2026, bringing together policymakers, technologists, and digital leaders from across Europe's public sector.
EU Open Source Policy Summit: An invite-only one-day event with free online access, hosted by OpenForum Europe (OFE), bringing together leaders from the public and private sectors to focus on digital sovereignty.
The Drupal Association is honoured to support the EU Open Source Policy Summit 2026 as a Bronze sponsor.
In addition to our sponsorship, we are pleased to highlight two members of our Board of Directors who will be sharing insights during the program:
- Baddy Sonja Breidert will join the panel: Europe as the World's Home for Open Source
- Sachiko Muto will provide an intervention on: UN Open Source Week 2026 and the UN Open Source Principles
FOSDEM: A two-day volunteer-run free event for the global open source community. Held every year at the end of January in Brussels, it is a massive event of contributors to share code, host community-led "devrooms," and collaborate face-to-face without registration fees or corporate barriers.
- HackerTrain to FOSDEM: An event that's meant to coordinate several train routes to Brussels to bring hackers from all over Europe to FOSDEM and the EU Open Source Week. This means that there will not be one HackerTrain, but several at the same time on different routes and different dates - all converging in Brussels.
EU OpenSource Week is going to be an immersive experience for developers, policymakers, and industry leaders to shape the future of open technology offering unparalleled opportunities to:
- Engage directly with EU policymakers,
- Learn from and collaborate with leading developers,
- Network and connect with open source communities,
- Explore new partnerships
Explore other events happening during the EU Open Source Week on their official website.
21 Jan 2026 6:26pm GMT
Dries Buytaert: Funding Open Source for Digital Sovereignty

As global tensions rise, governments are waking up to the fact that they've lost digital sovereignty. They depend on foreign companies that can change terms, cut off access, or be weaponized against them. A decision in Washington can disable services in Brussels overnight.
Last year, the International Criminal Court ditched Microsoft 365 after a dispute over access to the chief prosecutor's email. Denmark's Ministry of Digitalisation is moving to LibreOffice. And Germany's state of Schleswig-Holstein is migrating 30,000 workstations off Microsoft.
Reclaiming digital sovereignty doesn't require building the European equivalent of Microsoft or Google. That approach hasn't worked in the past, and there is no time to make it work now. Fortunately, Europe has something else: some of the world's strongest Open Source communities, regulatory reach, and public sector scale.
Open Source is the most credible path to digital sovereignty. It's the only software you can run without permission. You can audit, host, modify, and migrate it yourself. No vendor, no government, and no sanctions regime can ever take it away.
But there is a catch. When governments buy Open Source services, the money rarely reaches the people who actually build and maintain it. Procurement rules favor large system integrators, not the maintainers of the software itself. As a result, public money flows to companies that package and resell Open Source, not to the ones who do the hard work of writing and sustaining it.
I've watched this pattern repeat for over two decades in Drupal, the Open Source project I started and that is now widely used across European governments. A small web agency spends months building a new feature. They design it, implement it, and shepherd it through review until it's merged.
Then the government puts out a tender for a new website, and that feature is a critical requirement. A much larger company, with no involvement in Drupal, submits a polished proposal. They have the references, the sales team, and the compliance certifications. They win the contract. The feature exists because the small agency built it. But apart from new maintenance obligations, the original authors get nothing in return.
Public money flows around Open Source instead of into it.
Multiply that by every Open Source project in Europe's software stack, and you start to see both the scale of the problem and the scale of the opportunity.
This is the pattern we need to break. Governments should be contracting with maintainers, not middlemen.
Public money flows around Open Source instead of into it. Governments should contract with maintainers and builders, not middlemen.
Skipping the maintainers is not just unfair, it is bad governance. Vendors who do not contribute upstream can still deliver projects, but they are much less effective at fixing problems at the source or shaping the software's future. You end up spending public money on short-term integration, while underinvesting in the long-term quality, security, and resilience of the software you depend on.
If Europe wants digital sovereignty and real innovation, procurement must invest in upstream maintainers where security, resilience, and new capabilities are actually built. Open Source is public infrastructure. It's time we funded it that way.
The fix is straightforward: make contribution count in procurement scoring. When evaluating vendors, ask what they put back into the Open Source projects they are selling. Code, documentation, security fixes, funding.
Of course, all vendors will claim they contribute. I've seen companies claim credit for work they barely touched, or count contributions from employees who left years ago.
So how does a procurement officer tell who is real? By letting Open Source projects vouch for contributors directly. Projects know who does the work. We built Drupal's credit system to solve for exactly this. It's not perfect, but it's transparent. And transparency is hard to fake.
We use the credit system to maintain a public directory of companies that provide Drupal services, ranked by their contributions to the project. It shows, at a glance, which companies actually help build and maintain Drupal. If a vendor isn't on that list, they're most likely not contributing in a meaningful way. For a procurement officer, this turns a hard governance problem into a simple check: you can literally see which service providers help build Drupal. This is what contribution-based procurement looks like when it's made practical.
Fortunately, the momentum is building. APELL, an association of European Open Source companies, has proposed making contribution a procurement criterion. EuroStack, a coalition of 260+ companies, is lobbying for a "Buy Open Source Act". The European Commission has embraced an Open Source roadmap with procurement recommendations.
Europe does not need to build the next hyperscaler. It needs to shift procurement toward Open Source builders and maintainers. If Europe gets this right, it will mean better software, stronger local vendors, and public money that actually builds public code. Not to mention the autonomy that comes with it.
I submitted this post as feedback to the European Commission's call for evidence on Towards European Open Digital Ecosystems. If you work in Open Source, consider adding your voice. The feedback period ends February 3, 2026.
Special thanks to Taco Potze, Sachiko Muto, and Gábor Hojtsy for their review and contributions to this blog post.
21 Jan 2026 3:59pm GMT
CKEditor: What’s new in CKEditor Drupal modules: Footnotes, Restricted Editing and more
New versions of the CKEditor contributed modules bring new formatting and content control features to Drupal. Premium Features module 1.7.0 introduces Footnotes and Line Height support, expanding the toolkit for structured writing and print-optimized formatting. The release also includes support for watermarks in Word exports and several fixes to improve authoring experiences and compatibility. Plugin Pack module 1.5.0 delivers the long-awaited Restricted Editing feature for locked-down templates and controlled collaboration, along with configuration improvements to Layout Tables and general stability fixes.
21 Jan 2026 1:53pm GMT
19 Jan 2026
Symfony Blog
SymfonyLive Paris 2026: “Édition simultanée : Facile avec Symfony UX“
SymfonyLive Paris 2026, conference in French language only, will take place from March 26 to 27! The schedule is currently being revealed as we go along. More details are available here. 🎤 Nouvelle talk annoncé à SymfonyLive Paris 2026 ! Avec…
19 Jan 2026 11:00am GMT
18 Jan 2026
Symfony Blog
A Week of Symfony #994 (January 12–18, 2026)
This week, Symfony development activity focused on improving the HTTP Cache attribute and making some changes to controller event attributes. Meanwhile, we published more information about the upcoming SymfonyLive Paris 2026 conference. Lastly, we introduced…
18 Jan 2026 8:18am GMT
14 Jan 2026
Symfony Blog
Introducing the Symfony 8 Certification
Symfony 8 was released at the end of November 2025, alongside Symfony 7.4. Both versions share the exact same features, but Symfony 8.0 removes all deprecated features and requires PHP 8.4 or higher. Today, we're introducing the new certification exam for…
14 Jan 2026 9:27am GMT