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AUTHORS
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Developers
----------
* Christophe Vandeplas <[email protected]> (original author)
* Andras Iklody <[email protected]> (lead developer)
Contributors
------------
Aaron Kaplan
Airbus Group CERT (AiG CERT)
Alexander Jaeger
Alexandre Dulaunoy
Alexandru Ciobanu
Andras Iklody
Andreas Ziegler
Andrzej Dereszowski
Bâkır Emre
Chris Clark
Christophe Vandeplas
David André
Guilherme Capilé
Gábor Molnár
Iglocska
Koen Van Impe
L. Aaron Kaplan
Noud de Brouwer
Raphaël Vinot
Richard van den Berg
nullprobe
remg427
Copyright (C) 2012 Christophe Vandeplas
Copyright (C) 2012 Belgian Defence
Copyright (C) 2012 NATO / NCIRC
Copyright (C) 2013-2018 Andras Iklody
Copyright (C) 2015-2018 CIRCL - Computer Incident Response Center Luxembourg
Copyright (C) 2016 Andreas Ziegler
MISP is licensed under the GNU AFFERO GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE version 3.
History
=======
This project started around June 2011 when Christophe Vandeplas had a frustration that way to many IOCs were shared by email, or in pdf documents and were not parseable by automatic machines. So at home he started to play around with CakePHP and made a proof of concept of his idea. He called it CyDefSIG: Cyber Defence Signatures.
Mid July 2011 he presented his personal project at work (Belgian Defence) where the feedback was rather positive. After giving access to CyDefSIG running on his personal server the Belgian Defence started to use CyDefSIG officially starting mid August 2011.
Christophe was then allowed to spend some time on CyDefSIG during his work-hours, while still working on it at home.
At some point NATO heard about this project. On January 2012 a first presentation was done to introduce them in more depth to the project. They looked at other products that the market offered, but it seemed they deemed the openness of CyDefSIG to be of a great advantage. Andrzej Dereszowski was the first part-time developer from NATO side.
One thing led to another and some months later NATO hired a full-time developer to improve the code and add more features. A collaborative development started from that date.
As with many personal projects the license was not explicitly written yet, it was collaboratively decided that the project would be released publicly as Affero GPL. This to share the code with as many people as possible and to protect it from any harm.
The project was then renamed to MISP: Malware Information Sharing Project, a name invented by Alex Vandurme from NATO.
In January 2013 Andras Iklody became the main full-time developer of MISP, during the day hired by NATO and during the evening and week-end contributor to an open source project.
Meanwhile other organisations started to adopt the software and promoted it around the CERT world. (CERT-EU, CIRCL, and many others ...)
Nowadays, Andras Iklody is the lead developer of the MISP project and works for CIRCL.