iAeternum vs The Stack v2
The Stack v2 ranks higher at 58/100 vs iAeternum at 42/100. Capability-level comparison backed by match graph evidence from real search data.
| Feature | iAeternum | The Stack v2 |
|---|---|---|
| Type | Dataset | Dataset |
| UnfragileRank | 42/100 | 58/100 |
| Adoption | 1 | 1 |
| Quality | 0 | 1 |
| Ecosystem | 0 | 0 |
| Match Graph | 0 | 0 |
| Pricing | Free | Free |
| Capabilities | 4 decomposed | 11 decomposed |
| Times Matched | 0 | 0 |
iAeternum Capabilities
This capability allows users to search through a vast collection of over 100,000 museum artwork images utilizing a metadata-driven approach. It employs a structured query system that leverages the 4K token .json metadata for efficient filtering and retrieval, ensuring users can find specific artworks based on various criteria such as artist, era, or style. The integration of provenance tracking enhances the reliability of the datasets, making it distinct from generic image repositories.
Unique: Utilizes a metadata-driven search system that allows for nuanced queries based on detailed artwork provenance and characteristics.
vs alternatives: More comprehensive and detailed than generic image search engines due to its focus on art-specific metadata.
This capability enables users to preview artwork images along with their associated metadata before purchasing. It employs a lightweight image loading technique that fetches high-resolution images on demand, ensuring that users can quickly view and assess the quality of the datasets without overwhelming bandwidth usage. This approach is particularly useful for users who need to evaluate multiple artworks efficiently.
Unique: Incorporates on-demand image loading to provide previews without excessive data transfer, enhancing user experience.
vs alternatives: Faster and more efficient than traditional image galleries due to its dynamic loading capabilities.
This capability facilitates the purchase of curated art datasets through a micropayment system powered by x402 USDC. It leverages blockchain technology to ensure secure and transparent transactions, allowing users to buy datasets in small increments. This approach democratizes access to high-quality datasets, making it easier for smaller developers and researchers to acquire the data they need without significant upfront costs.
Unique: Utilizes a blockchain-based micropayment system that allows for fractional payments, making dataset acquisition more accessible.
vs alternatives: More flexible than traditional payment systems, allowing for smaller, incremental purchases.
This capability provides detailed provenance tracking for each artwork in the dataset, ensuring users can verify the authenticity and history of the artworks. It employs a blockchain ledger to record ownership and transaction history, which is accessible to users. This feature is crucial for researchers and developers who require reliable data sources for training models or conducting analyses.
Unique: Integrates blockchain technology to provide immutable records of artwork provenance, enhancing trust and reliability.
vs alternatives: More secure and transparent than traditional provenance tracking methods, which can be easily manipulated.
The Stack v2 Capabilities
Aggregates 67 TB of source code from the Software Heritage archive, filtering for permissively licensed repositories (MIT, Apache 2.0, BSD, etc.) across 600+ programming languages. Uses automated license detection and validation to ensure legal compliance for model training. Implements a rigorous deduplication pipeline at file and repository levels to eliminate redundant training data and reduce dataset bloat.
Unique: Largest open-source code dataset at 67 TB with automated opt-out governance allowing repository owners to request removal, combined with rigorous deduplication and PII removal pipeline — no other public dataset offers this scale with legal compliance and community control mechanisms
vs alternatives: Larger and more legally compliant than GitHub's CodeSearchNet (14M files) or Google's BigQuery public datasets, with explicit opt-out governance vs. implicit inclusion, and covers 600+ languages vs. Codex training data's undisclosed language distribution
Implements a community-driven opt-out system where repository owners can request removal of their code from the dataset without legal takedown notices. Maintains a registry of excluded repositories and re-applies exclusions during dataset updates. Provides transparent governance documentation and a clear submission process for removal requests, balancing open access with creator rights.
Unique: First large-scale code dataset to implement opt-out governance at dataset level rather than relying solely on license compliance, with transparent registry and community submission process — shifts power from dataset creators to code contributors
vs alternatives: More respectful of creator autonomy than GitHub Copilot's training approach (no opt-out) or academic datasets (one-time snapshot), and more scalable than individual DMCA takedowns
Automated pipeline that scans source code for personally identifiable information (email addresses, API keys, SSH keys, credit card patterns, phone numbers) and removes or redacts them before dataset release. Uses regex patterns, entropy-based detection for secrets, and heuristic rules to identify sensitive data. Operates at file level with configurable sensitivity thresholds to balance data utility against privacy risk.
Unique: Combines regex pattern matching, entropy-based secret detection, and heuristic rules in a unified pipeline with configurable sensitivity — more comprehensive than simple regex-only approaches, but trades off false positive rate against security coverage
vs alternatives: More thorough than GitHub's secret scanning (which only flags known patterns) because it includes entropy-based detection for unknown secret formats, but less accurate than specialized tools like TruffleHog due to language-agnostic approach
Indexes 67 TB of source code across 600+ programming languages with language-aware metadata (syntax, file extension, language family). Enables retrieval by language, license, repository, or code patterns. Uses Software Heritage's existing indexing infrastructure as foundation, augmented with language detection and classification. Supports both bulk download and filtered queries for specific language subsets.
Unique: Leverages Software Heritage's existing language detection and indexing infrastructure, then augments with BigCode-specific language classification and filtering — avoids reinventing language detection while providing dataset-specific query capabilities
vs alternatives: More comprehensive language coverage (600+ languages) than GitHub's Linguist (500+ languages) and more accessible than Software Heritage's raw API because it's pre-filtered for permissive licenses and deduplicated
Removes duplicate code files and repositories using content hashing (SHA-256 or similar) and fuzzy matching for near-duplicates. Operates in two stages: exact deduplication via hash matching, then fuzzy matching (e.g., Jaccard similarity or MinHash) to catch semantically identical code with minor formatting differences. Preserves one canonical copy of each unique code pattern while removing redundant training examples.
Unique: Two-stage deduplication combining exact hash matching with fuzzy similarity matching (likely MinHash or Jaccard) to catch both identical and near-identical code — more thorough than single-stage approaches but computationally expensive
vs alternatives: More aggressive deduplication than CodeSearchNet (which uses simple hash matching) because it catches near-duplicates, but less semantic than clone detection tools (which understand code structure) because it's content-based
Integrates with Software Heritage's comprehensive archive of 200+ million repositories and their full version control history. Extracts source code snapshots from Software Heritage's Git/Mercurial/SVN repositories, preserving repository metadata (commit history, author info, timestamps). Provides access to code at specific points in time, enabling historical analysis or training on code evolution patterns.
Unique: Leverages Software Heritage's universal code archive (200M+ repositories) as data source, providing access to code that would be impossible to collect via GitHub API alone — enables training on archived/deleted repositories and non-GitHub platforms (GitLab, Gitea, etc.)
vs alternatives: More comprehensive than GitHub-only datasets because it includes code from GitLab, Gitea, SourceForge, and other platforms archived by Software Heritage; more legally defensible than web scraping because it uses an established, community-maintained archive
Tracks and validates SPDX license identifiers for each repository, ensuring only permissively licensed code (MIT, Apache 2.0, BSD, etc.) is included. Maintains license metadata alongside code files, enabling downstream users to verify legal compliance. Implements license hierarchy and compatibility checking to handle dual-licensed or complex licensing scenarios.
Unique: Combines automated SPDX detection with manual review and maintains license metadata alongside code, enabling downstream users to verify compliance — more transparent than datasets that simply claim 'permissive licenses' without proof
vs alternatives: More legally rigorous than GitHub's CodeSearchNet (which doesn't validate licenses) and more transparent than Codex training data (which doesn't disclose license filtering at all)
Maintains versioned snapshots of the dataset (e.g., v2.0, v2.1) with documented changes between versions (new repositories added, deduplication improvements, PII removal updates). Provides checksums and manifests for reproducibility, enabling researchers to cite specific dataset versions and reproduce results. Tracks dataset lineage and transformation history.
Unique: Maintains semantic versioning and detailed changelogs for dataset releases, enabling researchers to cite specific versions and understand dataset evolution — more rigorous than one-off dataset releases without versioning
vs alternatives: More reproducible than academic datasets that are released once without versioning, and more transparent than commercial datasets (Codex) that don't disclose version history or changes
+3 more capabilities
Verdict
The Stack v2 scores higher at 58/100 vs iAeternum at 42/100. iAeternum leads on ecosystem, while The Stack v2 is stronger on adoption and quality.
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