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Systemd Creator Lennart Poettering Leaves Microsoft to Co-Found Linux Integrity Startup Amutable

Sebastian Hills
3 Min Read

Lennart Poettering, the influential developer behind systemd, the controversial yet ubiquitous init system powering modern Linux distributions, has quietly departed Microsoft to launch Amutable, a Berlin-based startup dedicated to bolstering Linuxโ€™s trustworthiness through cryptographically verifiable integrity from build to runtime.

Poettering, who joined Microsoft in 2022 after a storied career at Red Hat where he spearheaded systemdโ€™s development, announced his move on January 28, 2026, via a blog post, framing it as a mission to โ€œprove Linux can be trustedโ€ by addressing gaps in deterministic builds and runtime verification. At Amutable, he serves as Chief Engineer alongside CTO Christian Brauner, a Linux kernel maintainer known for LXC and LXD, and CEO Chris Kรผhl, formerly of the GNOME Foundation. The trioโ€™s venture aims to create tools ensuring Linux systems are tamper-proof and reproducible, tackling issues like supply chain attacks that have plagued open-source ecosystems.

โ€œDeterminism and verifiable integrity are an urgent need,โ€ Poettering wrote in his announcement, highlighting how current Linux distributions often produce non-identical binaries from the same source code due to build variations, making verification a nightmare. Amutable plans to develop open-source solutions for cryptographic signing, reproducible builds, and runtime checks, potentially integrating with existing tools like systemd to create โ€œimmutableโ€ Linux environments resistant to tampering. The company, self-funded initially, is hiring and focusing on enterprise and cloud applications where security is paramount.

Also Read: Microsoft Ends โ€˜Send to Kindleโ€™ Integration in Word Starting February 2026

Poetteringโ€™s exit from Microsoft, where he contributed to systemdโ€™s integration with Windows Subsystem for Linux and Azure, has sparked speculation in open-source circles. Some see it as a return to Linux roots, while others on forums like Hacker News express wariness about potential ties to Microsoftโ€™s ecosystem or broader โ€œwar on general computing.โ€ Poettering, no stranger to controversy, systemdโ€™s adoption in the 2010s sparked heated debates over Linuxโ€™s direction, addressed skeptics indirectly, emphasizing Amutableโ€™s focus on open-source principles.

This move comes amid a surge in Linux security initiatives, following high-profile breaches like the XZ Utils backdoor in 2024.

Microsoft, which has deepened its Linux embrace since Poetteringโ€™s hire, wished him well but offered no further comment. In an era of rising cyber threats, Amutableโ€™s focus on verifiable Linux could attract enterprises wary of open-source risks, but it also reignites debates over who controls the OSโ€™s future, Big Tech alumni or the community at large.

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