Thanks to maintainers working on projects like deep-equal-json, you can use Tidelift to give your teams access to a continuously curated stream of validated data about vetted components they need to make intelligent decisions, faster.
You can feel confident bringing deep-equal-json into your application’s dependency tree because the maintainers of deep-equal-json are paid by Tidelift to ensure their open source projects follow standardized secure software development practices.
Many enterprise organizations depend on deep-equal-json to build their applications. The maintainers of deep-equal-json work with Tidelift to bring deep-equal-json up to certain standards put in place by both industry and government guidelines.
Your organization can depend on deep-equal-json to be maintained and licensed properly with the Tidelift Subscription. The maintainers of deep-equal-json will also keep you up to date on which version your organization should be using and share other relevant data to your development process.
Tidelift takes a unique, data driven approach to addressing the issue of bad packages. Tidelift partners with the maintainers of thousands of the most-relied-upon open source packages and pays them to implement industry-leading secure software development practices and document the practices they follow. The result is a unique source of cross-ecosystem package intelligence that customers use to identify and eliminate bad packages.
Tidelift’s package intelligence can be easily integrated into your preferred workflows using our flexible APIs or by adopting our web UI and CLI capabilities.
jackson-databind
minimist
urllib3
SockJS
Pillow
Jordan Harband
Mongoose
Apache Commons
Improve the overall health and resilience of the open source you rely on so you can reduce the chances of being impacted by the next xz utils backdoor or Log4Shell.
Check out the new state of the open source maintainer report which included 11 key headlines coming out of our new survey of over 300 open source maintainers.
Tidelift mentioned in the Gartner hype cycle for open source software.