About Dat

Dat is a community-driven project for distributed data syncronization. The Dat Foundation imagines a web of commons created by global communities on open and secure protocols. We set out to improve access to public data and created a new protocol along the way, read more at datprotocol.com. In our work on developing Dat, we found a under-served need. User-driven software has potential to return control of digital information to the people. Today, building peer-to-peer applications presents both technical and ethical challenges but Dat is slowly changing that.

To encourage people to experiment and innovate with peer-to-peer technology, we aim to make Dat foundational software for peer-to-peer applications – one that is sponsored by a mission-driven nonprofit. To realize this future, we aim to make Dat good at supporting the core needs of peer-to-peer applications. We hope that with our small but critical focus, we can create a strong building block for the Dat ecosystem.

The first code went into Dat on August 17, 2013. Throughout its history, Dat has had a primary focus on Dat sharing in civic data and research, only recently with a wider focus on more general user-owned applications. Dat has been almost exclusively funded by grants from private foundations, read more on the funding history.

Supporters

Dat Foundation is sponsored by Code for Science & Society, a U.S. 501(c)(3) nonprofit. We received initial funding from the Knight Foundation, the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation, the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation.

Dat Foundation Governance

The Dat Foundation Governance supports the collaboration, funding, and community management for Dat. This group is involved in financial and legal decisions regarding the Dat Foundation in collaboration with Code for Science and Society. Learn more about Dat Foundation governance.

Mathias Buus

Mathias Buus


Karissa McKelvey

Karissa McKelvey


Danielle Robinson, PhD

Danielle Robinson, PhD


Joe Hand

Joe Hand


Dat Protocol Working Group

The Dat Protocol Working Group advances the protocol development and third-party implementations. This group documents all aspects of the Dat Protocol specification and makes decisions regarding protocol changes. Learn more about the Dat Protocol working group.

Mathias Buus

Mathias Buus


Paul Frazee

Paul Frazee


Karissa McKelvey

Karissa McKelvey


Joe Hand

Joe Hand


Brian Newbold

Brian Newbold


Key Community Collaborators

Dat Foundation is driven forward by many community members, most contributing as volunteers. These key collaborators contribute maintainance and development to core pieces of the Dat ecosystem.

Georgiy Shibaev

Georgiy Shibaev


Andrew Osheroff

Andrew Osheroff


David Clements

David Clements


Alumni

Tara Vancil

Tara Vancil

Max Ogden

Max Ogden

Yoshua Wuyts

Yoshua Wuyts

Jim Pick

Jim Pick

Kristina Schneider

Kristina Schneider

Julian Gruber

Julian Gruber

Chia-liang Kao

Chia-liang Kao

Melanie Cebula

Melanie Cebula

Portia Burton

Portia Burton

Bruno Vieira

Bruno Vieira

Yuhong Wang

Yuhong Wang

Juan Batiz-Benet

Juan Batiz-Benet

Finn Pauls

Finn Pauls