Hyundai Mobis Joins Open-Source S-Core Project to Standardize SDV Software
Hyundai Mobis has joined the Eclipse Foundation's SDV Working Group and will contribute its container solution to the open-source S-Core Project to help establish a global standard for mobility software.
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more than 10 times faster
What Happened
Hyundai Mobis announced on May 28, 2026 that it has joined the SDV Working Group under the Eclipse Foundation, the world's largest nonprofit open-source development association. It will participate in the S-Core Project to develop an SDV software platform. The S-Core Project, launched in late 2024 by primarily European companies, aims to standardize foundational technologies like software platforms and middleware. It is the first open-source software platform project to meet ASIL-B, the automotive functional safety standard.
The project currently has 13 participating companies, all working to implement core technologies needed for SDVs, such as autonomous driving. By using open-source development, companies disclose some software technologies, allowing global developers to use and improve them. This collective intelligence approach helps create highly versatile and standardized software, and can lead to a company's technology becoming a global standard.
more than 10 times faster
Hyundai Mobis's container solution is over 10 times faster than existing automotive controller technologies.
Why this matters
By adopting open source, Hyundai Mobis aims to make its software a global standard, accelerating development of autonomous driving and other SDV applications while reducing redundant investments.
Terms in This Story
- SDV
- Software-Defined Vehicle, a vehicle where software controls many functions and can be updated over the air.
- open source
- Software whose source code is publicly available for anyone to use, modify, and share.
- ASIL-B
- Automotive Safety Integrity Level B, a functional safety standard for automotive systems.
- container solution
- A technology that isolates software applications within an operating system, allowing them to run independently without interference.
Summarised from the linked release; details can be imperfect — always verify against the original source.