GitHub
Source code, documentation, repository structure, tooling, and public collaboration.
Datamorpho is an open technical project and public discussion is part of how the protocol should evolve. Review the specification, join discussions, open issues, contribute examples, and help shape the future of multi-state file infrastructure.
Join the project
Datamorpho is intended to grow through open review, open implementation, open examples, and open discussion.
Source code, documentation, repository structure, tooling, and public collaboration.
Protocol questions, design conversations, rationale, use cases, and long-form technical debate.
Project updates, releases, public milestones, and future calls for review.
For serious inquiries, collaborations, or media questions, write to g@evvm.org.
How to contribute
Datamorpho is not only a specification project and not only a tooling project. There are multiple ways to contribute meaningfully.
Read the normative specification and challenge unclear language, edge cases, or extension points.
Help improve Python and JavaScript tooling, error handling, examples, and protocol correctness.
Create concrete test cases, interoperability vectors, carrier examples, and annotated sample files.
Improve explanations, glossary entries, diagrams, FAQs, and onboarding material.
Examine assumptions, layout semantics, reconstruction-object handling, and cryptographic clarity.
Help connect Datamorpho with real-world use cases, developer communities, research, and future interoperability work.
Open review
The best way to enter the project depends on what you care about most: protocol design, tooling, examples, or future use cases.
Support
Datamorpho is being developed as open infrastructure: an open standard, open-source tooling suite, public documentation, public examples, and free web utilities. Support helps sustain maintenance, future contributors, public tooling, research, and ecosystem education.
The goal is to maintain Datamorpho as reusable public infrastructure for secure distribution, controlled disclosure, and future-proof digital objects, not as a closed private system.