Joost de Valk, founder of Yoast SEO, has left FAIR, a Linux Foundation project focused on federated software repositories. In a personal blog post, he cited limited industry funding as a key factor in his decision. The FAIR project acknowledged his departure in a separate statement and said the initiative will continue.
Key Details
De Valk confirmed his decision in a post on his personal site, where he explained that FAIR had not secured sufficient backing from hosting companies and other major ecosystem participants.
In that post, he wrote that potential backers viewed FAIR as involving financial cost, political tension, and risk, and therefore chose not to invest.
De Valk said potential supporters saw FAIR as "financial cost, political tension, and risk," leading them to hold back funding.
- FAIR is a Linux Foundation project focused on federated, independently hosted repositories for plugins, themes, and other software.
- Joost de Valk co-founded FAIR and promoted it within the WordPress plugin and theme ecosystem.
- His blog post links FAIR's current status to absent financial commitments from hosting providers and other large stakeholders.
- The FAIR project team publicly acknowledged his departure and confirmed that the initiative will continue.
- Both communications describe ongoing funding challenges as a central issue for FAIR's near-term development.
The FAIR project team explained in its own statement that it plans to keep working toward FAIR's goals while continuing to look for sustainable funding.
Background Context
According to public descriptions, FAIR was launched in mid-2025 in response to concerns about WordPress's centralized plugin infrastructure. Around that time, WordPress co-founder Matt Mullenweg replaced WP Engine's Advanced Custom Fields plugin on WordPress.org with a forked repository version, drawing attention to the platform's single central repository model for plugins and themes.
Critics argued that this centralization created a potential single point of failure for WordPress extensions. FAIR was positioned as an alternative approach, aiming to support a federated network of independent repositories that can distribute and verify software packages.
FAIR maintainers have framed the work as addressing broader software supply chain security, not only WordPress. In a recent FAIR blog post, the team referenced the European Union's Cyber Resilience Act, noting that from December 2027, the legislation will require demonstrable software supply chain integrity.
The post highlighted provenance, security scanning, and traceable update mechanisms as key elements for compliance and presented FAIR's architecture as aligned with those requirements.
Source Citations
- Joost de Valk's announcement and explanation of his departure from FAIR: read the full blog post
- FAIR project statement acknowledging the departure and outlining ongoing goals: read the FAIR blog update






