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---
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title: The concept and team
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---
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## Mission
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At robur we strive to develop robust digital infrastructure. We achieve this goal
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by continuous maintainence of permissively licensed (MIT/ISC/BSD) open
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source libraries, which are used by various partners and supporters.
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Robur is a non-profit endeavour that strives to enable more people to run their own digital
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infrastructure. Minimising the executable size of services and cutting down
complexity is crucial to help people to understand the technology.
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Rewards (in terms of shirts, money, stickers, hardware, retreats) for
contributors of the open source community are part of the funding plan.
Academic papers and talks at workshops and technical conferences will be
written to document the development and deployment of the technology.
The annual balance will be opened for the public to satisfy transparency what
donations and funding is used for.
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## Non-profit company
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Supporters can make charitable donations to robur, which will be used for
further development and maintainence of software and community infrastructure.
Partners can contract robur to develop prototypes (see example
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[projects](/Projects)). Developed libraries are open sourced under a
permissive license if possible, to be reusable by other interested parties.
The application code itself is exclusively owned by the funding partner.
Examples include branding, configuration and the concrete composition of libraries.
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Negotiable terms include time-limited exclusively licenses, service level
agreements (on-call troubleshooting, running infrastructure, updates), early
access on new development, influencing on the development roadmap.
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## Team
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### Alfred
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Alfred is a research associate at the University of Cambridge. He enjoys to write
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code, and also travelling and repairing his recumbent bicycle, and being a
barista.
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Alfred did his PhD in computer science about formal verification of
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imperative code (using a higher-order separation logic and the theorem prover
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Coq). At the moment he is working on an executable formal model of
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TCP/IP which can act as a test validator.
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Alfred co-authored a TLS implementation from the grounds up in OCaml, and
contributes to the MirageOS project as a core team member.
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### Eva
Eva is an infrastructure software engineer and a researcher.
She studied Applied Computer Science in the Natural Sciences, and developed a typechecker for a compiler of a language for optimization problems. In her PhD project she developed metrics to compare forest data structures, with an application in molecular structure comparison. Working as a postdoc in cancer research on molecular structure prediction, she found her way to Brooklyn and Berlin.
In the US tech industry, she works on infrastucture problems with distributed systems on a large scale with millions of users, developing API infrastructure and search infrastructure, with a focus on stateless systems.
Her Erdős number is 4.
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## Contact
If you want to get in contact with us, write an email to us AT robur DOT io.