Record Number of Applicants Propels Rust Project to 13 GSoC 2026 Acceptances
Record Number of Applicants Propels Rust Project to 13 GSoC 2026 Acceptances
The Rust Project has secured 13 slots in Google Summer of Code 2026 after receiving a record 96 proposals — a 50% increase over last year — despite grappling with a surge of AI-generated applications and recent mentor funding losses.
Google announced the accepted projects on April 30, and the Rust Project confirmed the final list today. The 13 selected contributors will work on projects ranging from safe GPU offloading to new debugger tools.
“We had to carefully filter out AI-generated proposals and low-quality contributions,” said a Rust Project spokesperson. “We also had to cancel several projects because mentors lost funding. But the community’s enthusiasm was overwhelming.”
Background
Google Summer of Code is a global program that introduces new contributors to open-source projects. The Rust Project has participated in GSoC for multiple years, offering a list of project ideas and mentoring applicants through Zulip discussions.

This year, many applicants made meaningful contributions to Rust repositories before the official start, but the rise of AI agents posed new challenges. Mentors evaluated proposals based on prior interactions, contribution quality, and project importance while balancing mentor bandwidth.
Selected Projects
The finalized list of 13 accepted proposals (alphabetical by project name) is below. Each includes a brief description, author, and mentor(s).
- A Frontend for Safe GPU Offloading in Rust by Marcelo Domínguez, mentored by Manuel Drehwald
- Adding WebAssembly Linking Support to Wild by Kei Akiyama, mentored by David Lattimore
- Bringing autodiff and offload into Rust CI by Shota Sugano, mentored by Manuel Drehwald
- Debugger for Miri by Mohamed Ali Mohamed, mentored by Oli Scherer
- Implementing impl and mut restrictions by Ryosuke Yamano, mentored by Jacob Pratt and Urgau
- Improving Ergonomics and Safety of serialport-rs by Tanmay, mentored by Christian Meusel
What This Means
The 13 accepted projects represent a significant expansion of Rust’s open-source workforce, addressing critical areas like GPU programming, WebAssembly linking, and tooling. However, the mentor funding cuts highlight ongoing fragility in open-source sustainability.
“We are excited to welcome these contributors, but we need more stable funding to support mentoring capacity,” the spokesperson added. The Rust community can expect new features and improved safety tools as these projects progress through the summer.
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