Organizations

The Naftiko go-to-market is built upon the existing outreach and community activities of these organizations, which means we will be tuning into the channels these organizations use and work to amplify and contribute alongside their work, and what we are building at Nafitko.

Apache Foundation

The Apache Software Foundation is a nonprofit organization that provides organizational, legal, and financial support for a wide range of open-source software projects, including popular tools like Apache HTTP Server, Hadoop, and Kafka.

Cloud Native Computing Foundation (CNCF)

The Cloud Native Computing Foundation (CNCF) is a subsidiary of the Linux Foundation founded in 2015 that serves as a vendor-neutral hub for supporting and hosting fast-growing cloud-native open-source projects like Kubernetes, Prometheus, and Envoy, bringing together developers, end users, and vendors to advance cloud-native computing.

IANA

IANA (Internet Assigned Numbers Authority) is the organization responsible for coordinating the global allocation and management of internet protocol resources, including IP addresses, domain name system (DNS) root zones, and protocol parameter registries.

Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF)

HTTP/3 is the latest HTTP version that runs over QUIC (on UDP), providing multiplexed streams with built-in TLS 1.3 and connection migration to avoid TCP head-of-line blocking and improve performance.

Linux Foundation

The Linux Foundation is a nonprofit organization founded in 2000 that provides a neutral, trusted hub for developers and organizations to code, manage, and scale open source technology projects, supporting approximately 1,000 projects across various industries and delivering tools, training, events, and infrastructure that create an economic impact not achievable by any single company.

World Wide Web Consortium (W3C)

The World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) is an international public-interest nonprofit organization founded in 1994 by web inventor Tim Berners-Lee that develops open standards and guidelines to help build a web based on the principles of accessibility, internationalization, privacy, and security, ensuring the long-term growth and interoperability of the World Wide Web.


Last modified January 3, 2026: update latest changes (fb09925)