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From YouTube: Fireside Chat: Open source at Meta - Universe 2022
Description
Meta is built on open source technology, and strives to empower communities through open source. In a conversation with GitHub, Meta’s Lead Developer Advocate, Dmitry, will share their learnings on open source at Meta.
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A
A
A
B
B
First
I,
you
know,
I
was
just
curious
about
tech
and
I
went
to
a
conference
open
source
conference
up
called
apachecon.
One
of
the
big
events
from
the
Linux
foundation
and
I
was
just
so
excited
by
the
energy
that
I
experienced
in
the
hallways
at
lectures
that
I,
attended
and
I
wanted
to
do
more
of
those
events,
but
you
know
attending
it's
kind
of
it
gets
expensive
really
quickly.
So
I
decided
to
speak
at
conferences,
because
that
was
the
easier
way
to
get
started.
B
Yeah
and
so
I
applied
for
a
couple
first
year,
I
did
like
three
three
events:
the
following
year:
15
the
year
after
50.
switch,
went
out
of
country
really
quickly
and
I
decided
to
make
it
my
full-time
job
and
at
one
point,
I
went
to
Denver
realcon,
a
big
conference
here
in
San
Francisco
focused
on
devrel,
developer,
advocacy
and
I
met
my
now
ex
manager,
Kathy
cam
Who,
convinced
me
to
apply
and
be
developer,
advocate
of
metal,
open
source
and
ultimately
also
convinced
me
to
move
from
Canada
to
you
to
the
US.
B
Where
I
actually
met
my
wife.
She
definitely
makes
it
even
like
more
meaningful
for
me.
So
that's
really
how
I
got
to
devrel
and
open
source
and
I.
You
know
it's
again
my
start
position,
identity,
I'm
sure
many
of
you
are
and
maybe
one
day
speakers
then
maybe
you
decide
to
be.
You
know
the
average
very.
A
Nice,
so
everyone
continue
to
submit
to
as
many
call
for
papers
as
you
can.
Meta's
open
source
program
has
a
lot
of
track
record
of
success
around
creating
projects
and
maintaining
them
like
graphql
Pi
torch
and
react.
What
do
you
attribute
to
the
success
of
those
projects
and
where
are
you
all
now
on
your
open
source?
Journey?
That's.
B
A
great
question
because
I
mean
it's
kind
of
a
cliche
to
say
at
this
point,
but
math
is
all
about
scale
right,
even
when
it
applies
to
meta
open
source
program.
We
every
year
we
publish
meta,
open
source
here,
review
blog
post
and
the
last
time
you
know
we
did
some
calculations,
we
figured
there
were
over
800
active,
open
source
projects,
and
so
with
that
in
mind,
obviously
it
comes
with
the.
How
do
you
manage
it
at
scale?
How
do
I
approach
that
so.
B
I
mean
what
we
apply
is
a
tiering
system.
So
of
course,
we
first
start
talking
to
individual
teams.
We
make
sure
they
have
plans
and
goals
in
mind.
We
try
to.
Basically
you
know,
support
them
in
those
goals
that
their
their
individual
Journeys,
and
so
we
have
a
tiering
system,
our
team.
Of
course,
you
know
we
have
so
many
people
working
at
open
source,
but
our
devrel
team
is
just
about
15
people,
it's
fairly
small
right.
B
So
what
we
do
is
we
have
a
80
of
projects
maintained
and
supported
by
us
through
self-service,
where
we
make
sure
there
is
documentation
in
place.
We
have
an
amazing,
tooling
team
at
open
source
that
make
sure
that
there
is
a
great
automation,
so
teams
can
support
themselves.
Then
we
have
about
15
of
the
projects.
B
A
B
Mean
we
actively
and
extensively
using
GitHub
platform
for
our
code
and,
of
course,
when
it
comes
to
GitHub,
you
can
think
of
you
know
archived
status
right,
basic
read-only
projects,
those
always
sound
non-active,
but
else
you
can
think
of
it
more
conceptually
right.
Is
there
maintenance
going
on
for
the
project
or
is
it
maybe
a
read-only
project,
because
many
of
the
research
open
source
code
would
be
just
to
share
with
the
community
the
code
that
comes
along
with
like
white
paper
or
some
research
paper
so
really
make
sure
that
that
distinction
is
there
excellent.
B
Glad
you
already,
you
actually
already
said
it.
You
said
Community,
because
really
that's
the
key
for
anything
to
do
with
open
source
communities
would
basically
drives
the
beginning
of
the
project,
its
growth
and,
ultimately,
the
evolution
of
you
know,
bringing
the
community
members
into
the
fault,
whether
they're
contributing
or
they
maintaining
the
projects
and
really
with
react.
B
As
you
mentioned,
what
I
really
enjoyed
seeing
was
the
war
group
they
launched
for
one
of
the
latest
releases,
where
I
would
really
work
with
the
community
a
lot
closer
to
collect
the
teacher
requests
to
make
sure
we
announce
it
properly.
Work
with
them
and
people
really
feel
like
they're
part
of
it,
not
just
the
consumer
right.
The
same
can
be
said
about
just
better
transparency
right
with
react
native
again,
the
same
kind
of
ecosystem
with
react
native
with
shared
multi-platform,
Vision
very
openly.
B
I
said
we
don't
really
mandate
anything,
we
are
really
open
about
open
source,
but
what
gives
people
guidelines?
It
can
be
something
like
GitHub
discussions
that
some
teams
started
adopting
or
it
can
be
some
other.
You
know
messaging
patterns
they
might
be
using
whatever
their
team
prefers.
Maybe
it's
something
like
more
old-fashioned.
You
can
say,
like
email
list
stripe
still
in
the
works
in
some
spaces,
some
communities
so
we'll
work
with
it,
making
sure
that
standards
are
there.
It's
secure.
The
code
of
conduct
is
in
place
because
really
we
are
our
mission
at
meta.
B
Open
source
is
empowering
diverse
communities
through
open
source
technology,
and
that's
that
main,
you
know
word
of
diverse
communities
and
making
sure
it's
safe
for
everyone.
That's
why,
when
it
comes
to
any
channel
any
communication
making
sure
you
know,
there
is
way
to
make
few
people
feel
comfortable.
So
our
team
will
support
them
in
that
Journey.
But
you
don't
mandate
any
particular
product,
fantastic.
A
B
Guess
it
always
comes
down
to
planning,
it's
always
exciting,
to
begin
your
journey,
but
it's
kind
of
a
not
to
say
green,
but
people
don't
want
to
think
about
how
it's
going
to
end
or
how
it's
going
to
evolve
right.
It's
like
going
on
a
hike
you
might
drive
to
a
national
park
and
prepare
go
for
a
hike.
You
start
your
journey,
you
walk
like
I,
don't
know
10
miles,
and
then
you
actually
never
thought
of
how
you're
gonna
go
back.
Did
you
bring
enough
food,
or
do
you
have
enough
energy?
B
Why
did
you
even
go
that
you
take
pictures
so
really
the
planning
for
your
journey,
for
whatever
your
project
is
making
sure
the
goal
that
the
team
has
in
mind
is
not
just
open
sourcing
for
the
sake
of
open
sourcing,
it
can
be
something
like
they
try
to
grow
adoption.
It
can
be
bringing
contributions.
Let's
say
you
write
your
project
for
iOS
right,
you
don't
use
iOS,
you
don't
use
Android
internally
as
much,
but
your
community
might
bring
that
contribution
and
build
it
for
Android.
B
That's
one
of
the
goals
that
people
might
consider-
or
maybe
it's
just
sharing
with
the
community
you're,
not
looking
for
contributions,
looking
not
looking
for
adoptions,
but
just
make
it
clear
to
the
community
being
open
and
transparent
and
clear
with
yourself
and
with
the
community.
That's
really
the
way
to
successful
projects.
A
B
It
all
depends
on
the
priorities
of
the
project
of
the
pro
of
the
community
behind
the
project
right.
We
just
recently
announced
by
torch,
going
to
Foundation.
We
had
we've
been
working
with
many
foundations
in
the
past.
Some
projects
continue
to
evolve
and
we're
working
with
them
actively,
so
it
it
always
depends
right.
It
depends
on
the
state
of
the
project
state
of
the
community
state
of
the
team
behind
it.
So
it's
always
really
depends.
B
I
guess
it's
the
same
thing
we've
been
following
for
many
years
now
our
mission
statement
right
as
I
said
before:
it's
really
about
empowering
diverse
communities
through
open
source
Technologies
and
we're
trying
to
stay
true
to
that
mission,
whether
it's
supporting
smaller
events
or
it's
about
supporting
mlh
working
with
major
league
hacking
project
to
you
know,
Drive
the
contributions
to
open
source
making.
B
Sure
people
are
you
know
paid
for
that
supported
in
their
Journeys
mentoring,
people
to
get
into
the
open
source,
or
it
might
be
even
supporting
larger
events
like
we
just
went
to
All
Things
open
where
we
were
one
of
the
you
know:
dni
supporters
and
contributors.
So
it's
really
been
the
most
exciting
to
me
personally
and
as
our
team
for
open
source
program
as
a
whole.
B
I
guess
the
best
place
for
everyone
to
go
to
is
meta
open
source
website,
where
you
can
find
all
the
channels
to
follow
whether
it's
YouTube,
Facebook,
page
or
Twitter
account
that
we
have-
and
you
can
see
our
you
know
most
current
updates
content
events
we're
going
to
but
yeah
that's
really
the
place
metal
open
source
website.
You'll
find.
All
of
that.
You
can
also,
you
know,
reach
out
to
our
team
members
through
the
website
through
those
social
channels,
I
mentioned
and
I'm
excited
to
see
you
becoming
part
of
our
community.