Fedi is set to release its complete software stack as open source on January 3, fulfilling a commitment made at its launch in 2024. This significant transition means that all Fedi software will now be available under the Affero General Public License (AGPL), moving away from an interim business source license. This change ensures that Fedi’s codebase will be accessible to the public under a copyleft license, which mandates that any derivative works also remain open source.
The choice of January 3 as the release date is particularly symbolic, coinciding with the anniversary of the Bitcoin genesis block, first mined in 2009. Fedi emphasized that this timing reflects its dedication to community ownership and the establishment of grassroots financial infrastructures. When Fedi first launched, its mission was to emerge as a “freedom technology,” positing that it would return control to individuals and their communities. The shift to open source is seen as a key step in fulfilling this mission, mitigating the risk of vendor lock-in for groups relying on its software.
Fedi’s platform enables communities to craft localized financial and social systems. Its application integrates features like encrypted messaging, Bitcoin payments, and additional services available through Mini App extensions. The underlying wallet infrastructure is powered by the Fedimint protocol, which facilitates shared Bitcoin custody by employing federated trust models. This structure ensures that groups can manage their funds collaboratively without the centralization risk associated with traditional financial institutions.
The AGPL license is particularly noteworthy; it is designed to keep improvements to the software publicly available, even when the software is utilized in hosted or networked environments. Supporters argue that this licensing model aligns development incentives with user interests, promoting continuous enhancement of the software in a way that benefits the broader community.
Fedi executives have actively promoted this licensing transition during various public engagements, including a recent appearance by CEO Obi Nwosu in a pre-show segment at BitcoinMENA. With this transition, Fedi joins a growing community of Bitcoin-native projects committed to open development, as the application of Bitcoin expands beyond early adopters to increasingly involve community-scale use cases.
The underpinning concept of Fedimint draws its origins from ideas proposed by renowned cryptographer David Chaum in the early 1980s. Chaumian e-cash aims to enable users to transact without disclosing their identities or transaction histories to the issuer. Previous versions of digital currency struggled to achieve widespread adoption mainly due to centralization, where a single mint controlled both issuance and redemption—a scenario fraught with trust and censorship risks.
Bitcoin, in contrast, decentralized transaction validation among a global network of nodes, alleviating the need for a trusted mint but at the expense of exposing transaction data and facing throughput limitations. Fedimint seeks to reconcile these models by utilizing Bitcoin as the reserve asset while distributing custody among a federation of independent “guardians,” preventing any one entity from exerting control over funds or transaction information. This innovative structure aims to lower censorship risks while safeguarding user privacy, thus enabling communities to establish shared financial infrastructures that do not rely on banks or centralized platforms.


