SingleStore is eliminating the DeWitt Clause from its contract, allowing greater transparency around database performance among themselves and industry competitors. The company aims to push boundaries of database performance and share technology innovations with customers and the industry, while promoting open discussion and comparison of different database products. This move follows a shift away from industry standards that previously stifled open competition and innovation by forbidding users from publishing benchmarks without approval. SingleStore is now implementing a "DeWitt Openness Clause" to require competitors to benchmark their databases in an open and transparent manner, promoting transparency and reproducibility of results. The company believes its users should be able to benchmark SingleStore freely, access information about database products, and see the results for themselves.