What CVOYA publishes

Two projects, two licences, and why we never collapse them into one word.

The stance

We publish the parts of our work that are more useful shared than held. That is a narrower claim than “we are an open-source company,” and it is the true one.

Two projects are public. They are under different licences, and the difference is not cosmetic, so we name it every time rather than reaching for “open source” as a catch-all.

CVOYA Graph — open source

Apache License 2.0. Genuinely open source: read it, run it, fork it, ship it in a commercial product, build a competing thing with it. No strings.

It is a type-safe .NET abstraction over graph databases, queryable with LINQ. It stands on its own — a library, offered as a library. CVOYA publishes the Cvoya.Graph packages on NuGet.

Spring Voyage — source-available

Business Source License 1.1. Not open source, and we do not call it that. You may read the source, modify it, and run it in production — including commercially. You may not offer it to third parties as a competing managed agent-collaboration service.

That single restriction lapses on 10 April 2030, when the licence converts to Apache 2.0 and Spring Voyage becomes open source in the full sense.

Where to find it

Both projects, with their licences and packages, are indexed at oss.cvoya.com — the code CVOYA publishes. The repositories live under github.com/cvoya-com.