
In particular I’d like to thank the following people for helping to make this a reality: the Wireshark core development team for providing much needed support and advice, and for making all of this possible. The project leadership and I have been working on this for a long time, and many other people have generously given their time and expertise in order to make this happen. The foundation is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit and will host SharkFest, our developer and user conference, help to facilitate Wireshark’s development, and promote analysis and troubleshooting education. This is why I’m beyond thrilled to announce that the Wireshark community now has a permanent home: the Wireshark Foundation. I’m grateful that my employers and other sponsors have ensured that the community has had the resources to grow and thrive over the years. Our users, educators, and developers have a passion for packets and protocols, and their work is important – modern society runs on computer networks and those networks need to be reliable, fast, and secure.

The thing that I most love about working on Wireshark is our community.
