Jonathan Bryce, executive director of the CNCF, noted that 98% of organizations now utilize cloud-native techniques, cementing the ecosystem as the global standard for infrastructure. The influx of new members, ranging from AI-specialized startups to established financial software providers, highlights the growing necessity of containerization in supporting complex AI models and production-scale applications.
The new cohort includes firms focused on diverse segments of the stack. Actualyze AI, Fongcon Technology, and SourceFuse AI are prioritizing AI production and high-performance computing, while companies like Breqwatr, cloudscale.ch, and Solanica provide the essential managed services and control planes required for modern database and infrastructure lifecycle management. Additionally, the inclusion of end-user organizations like Lovable and Teciem demonstrates the broad utility of these technologies, with the latter serving over 340 financial institutions globally.
Beyond corporate members, the Erlang Ecosystem Foundation has joined as a non-profit partner to further the development of scalable, distributed applications. These new members gain access to substantial organizational benefits, including KubeCon sponsorship opportunities, Linux Foundation legal resources, and collaborative project working groups, reinforcing the foundation's role in governing the software that powers global digital infrastructure.




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