Hi everyone,
I’ve personally noticed quite a regression recently—after one of the newer Ataccama updates (even in our Cloud environments!), we lost access to the MinIO GUI admin console and several useful storage management features.
I was wondering what caused this until I came across a report that explains everything: MinIO has officially killed off its free version (Community Edition). On February 12, 2026, their GitHub repository was updated with a final, definitive message: "THIS REPOSITORY IS NO LONGER MAINTAINED".
What exactly happened:
-
For the past 18 months, the creators of MinIO have been systematically stripping features from the free version (which explains the missing GUI we are now experiencing).
-
Public Docker images and binaries have been completely removed, halting the ability to patch security vulnerabilities (CVEs).
-
The only supported option left is their commercial product, AIStor, with a starting price of $96,000 a year.
Since Ataccama uses MinIO under the hood as its built-in S3-compatible storage, these upstream component updates have had a direct knock-on effect on us users. We are now left with an abandoned, unpatchable infrastructure component that has also been stripped of its administrative tools.
I'm posting this as an FYI, but I also want to open up a discussion and hopefully get an official stance from the Ataccama R&D team:
-
What is the roadmap going forward? Given the abandonment of MinIO CE, are you planning to replace it with another open-source alternative (e.g., SeaweedFS, Garage) in the Ataccama ONE architecture?
-
What about security? How will current environments (both Cloud and On-Prem) be secured going forward, since free MinIO is no longer receiving security patches?
-
Is there a workaround? Will there be a built-in tool or workaround within Ataccama to compensate for the loss of the MinIO management console?
Let me know if you guys are also missing the old GUI and how you're handling file management right now.
(Link to the full article: How MinIO went from open source darling to cautionary tale)


