Do you want to release something as open source? Awesome! It's up to you to get it ready, but don't worry, you are never alone. You can read the checklist and then open a new issue to get started. Consider these questions as you start to open source the project.
It's easier to answer this question in terms of what should not be open sourced:
- Don't open source anything that represents core business value. If it makes us lots of money by being closed source, don't open source it.
- Don't open source anything that is specific to internal processes. If it won't be useful to anyone that doesn't work here, don't open source it.
- Don't open source anything you can't commit to maintaining long-term. Some projects are inherently difficult to maintain. If you don't want to spend time accepting contributions and working with the open source community, don't open source it.
Before you open source your project, consider the effort required to maintain it. Being an great open source maintainer requires more effort than managing a closed source project. Read our Maintainer Guide to understand what will be expected of you.
Before using a source project in your project, consider evaluating the criteria to keep in mind and best practices. Thus, you will avoid uncomfortable surprises later. Read our Using OSS Guide
When interacting in a repository owned by the Bancolombia organization, you are speaking on behalf of the company. Read our Communication Guidelines
We've an engineering blog where we're publishing three posts every month about how we do technology at Bancolombia. You can read it on https://medium.com/bancolombia-tech
Do you work for Bancolombia? You can write your own posts. Contact the open source office through Microsoft teams for the process.
Work in progress!
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This repository is licensed under CC-BY-4.0 (c) 2019 GitHub, Inc.