About Us
Some information about the Jupyter Project and Community
Project Jupyter is a non-profit, open-source project, born out of the IPython Project in 2014 as it evolved to support interactive data science and scientific computing across all programming languages. Jupyter will always be 100% open-source software, free for all to use and released under the liberal terms of the modified BSD license.
Jupyter is developed in the open on GitHub, through the consensus of the Jupyter community. For more information on our governance approach, please see our Governance Document.
All online and in-person interactions and communications directly related to the project are covered by the Jupyter Code of Conduct. This Code of Conduct sets expectations to enable a diverse community of users and contributors to participate in the project with respect and safety.
Steering Council
The role of the Jupyter Steering Council is to ensure, through working with and serving the broader Jupyter community, the long-term well-being of the project, both technically and as a community. The Jupyter Steering Council currently consists of the following members (in alphabetical order).
Damian Avila
Anaconda, Inc.
@damianavila on GitHub
Matthias Bussonnier
UC Berkeley
@carreau on GitHub
Sylvain Corlay
QuantStack
@sylvaincorlay on GitHub
Brian Granger
Cal Poly, San Luis Obispo
@ellisonbg on GitHub
Jason Grout
Bloomberg
@jasongrout on GitHub
Jessica Hamrick
DeepMind
@jhamrick on GitHub
Paul Ivanov
Bloomberg
@ivanov on GitHub
Kyle Kelley
Netflix
@rgbkrk on GitHub
Thomas Kluyver
University of Southampton
@takluyver on GitHub
Peter Parente
Valassis Digital
@parente on GitHub
Fernando Perez
UC Berkeley
@fperez on GitHub
Min Ragan-Kelley
Simula Research Lab
@minrk on GitHub
Ana Ruvalcaba
Cal Poly, San Luis Obispo
@ruv7 on GitHub
Steven Silvester
JPMorgan Chase
@blink1073 on GitHub
Carol Willing
Cal Poly
@willingc on GitHub
Retired Steering Council Member
Jonathan Frederic
Member: 2016-2018
@jdfreder on GitHub
Donations
Jupyter will always be 100% open source software, free for all to use and released under the liberal terms of the modified BSD license. If you have found Project Jupyter to be useful in your work, research or company, please consider making a donation to the project commensurate with your resources.
All donations will be used strictly to fund the development of Project Jupyter’s open source software, documentation and community. Our donations are managed by the NumFOCUS Foundation, which is the legal and fiscal umbrella for the project.
NumFOCUS is a 501(c)3 non-profit foundation; if you are subject to US Tax law, your contributions will be tax-deductible.