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Programming Microsoft Software The Almighty Buck The Internet Technology

GitHub Free Users Now Get Unlimited Private Repositories (techcrunch.com) 74

GitHub has always offered free accounts, but users were forced to make their code public. To get private repositories, you had to pay. Now, as TechCrunch reports, "Free GitHub users now get unlimited private projects with up to three collaborators." From the report: The amount of collaborators is really the only limitation here and there's no change to how the service handles public repositories, which can still have unlimited collaborators. This feels like a sign of goodwill on behalf of Microsoft, which closed its acquisition of GitHub last October, with former Xamarin CEO Nat Friedman taking over as GitHub's CEO.

Talking about teams, GitHub also today announced that it is changing the name of the GitHub Developer suite to 'GitHub Pro.' The company says it's doing so in order to "help developers better identify the tools they need." But what's maybe even more important is that GitHub Business Cloud and GitHub Enterprise (now called Enterprise Cloud and Enterprise Server) have become one and are now sold under the 'GitHub Enterprise' label and feature per-user pricing.
In response, GitLab CEO Sid Sijbrandij said: "GitHub today announced the launch of free private repositories with up to three collaborators. GitLab has offered unlimited collaborators on private repositories since the beginning. We believe Microsoft is focusing more on generating revenue with Azure and less on charging for DevOps software. At GitLab, we believe in a multi-cloud future where organizations use multiple public cloud platforms."
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GitHub Free Users Now Get Unlimited Private Repositories

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  • by Anonymous Coward

    Run! Rabbit! Run!

  • by m.alessandrini ( 1587467 ) on Tuesday January 08, 2019 @07:04AM (#57923292)
    Bitbucket is the place you go if you want a free private git repository on the cloud, so this is simply competition, not goodwill.
    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by h33t l4x0r ( 4107715 )
      Bitbucket is such a turd though. I welcome this change in a big way.
    • by jonwil ( 467024 )

      Gitlab also offers free private repos without restrictions (I administer one myself)

      • Re: (Score:2, Troll)

        by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

        In response, GitLab CEO Sid Sijbrandij said: "GitHub today announced the launch of free private repositories with up to three collaborators. GitLab has offered unlimited collaborators on private repositories since the beginning. We believe Microsoft is focusing more on generating revenue with Azure and less on charging for DevOps software. At GitLab, we believe in a multi-cloud future where organizations use multiple public cloud platforms."

        Translation:

        "Fuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuk we just lost the only reason people were using us!"

        • "Fuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuk we just lost the only reason people were using us!"

          I for one went to gitlab when Mickeysoft acquired github, so there are at least two reasons.

        • I’m not sure GitLab is that concerned about someone else drawing off some of their non-paying customers.

          • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

            They have the free offering because it often leads to paying customers. If people use the free version and get used to it they may then suggest that their company adopts it. That's what happened at my current and last employer.

      • Presumably many people keep or contribute to public projects on github because it's the most used one, and keep their private stuff on bitbucket or gitlab because it's free, so offering them a chance to unify everything in one place could actually be a huge win for github.
        • by ceoyoyo ( 59147 )

          Yes... although the 3 collaborators restriction is still pretty annoying. I host private repos on gitlab and push public releases to github. Works fine, and also makes it a little harder to screw up and publish something sensitive.

    • Personally, I use gitlab for such things, but I'd love to know how big github is now that the dust has settled on the MS deal. I mean, a load of people went to gitlab (and presumably bitbucket), but how many (genuinely active) repos are left on Github? It's still got to be comfortably the biggest, but I wonder how much it hurt them. Evidently enough that they need to do this...

    • I don't think anyone was banking on Microsoft to be acting purely out of good will. At best, it's marketing that hopes to produce good will from us.

      But I don't care much. My question would be, is it good? Or maybe instead I can ask, given this new offering, is this a better deal than what BitBucket or Gitlab are offering?

      • Github's advantage is it is the largest and best known of the git collaboration sites, so it is where you and your potential collaborators are most likely to already be set-up rather than creating yet more accounts on yet more sites.

        The main downside of github's new free repos seems to be the collaborator limit, gitlab offers unlimited collaborators. Bitbucket seems to count any user you give access to a private repo as part of your "team" for the purpose of account limits (free accounts are limited to 5 "t

  • by Anonymous Coward

    So No thanks.

  • Since their code is by definition always correct, they store software versions to /dev/null.
  • by Anonymous Coward

    Private... right...

  • I wonder what "unlimited" actually means with GitHub. I am pretty sure you can't actually create "many" repositories without GitHub shutting you down.

    What if I wanted for example to use GitHub as my personal file backup? And just created one repository for each file and split the file up into multiple repositories for files over 1GB. I am pretty sure I could not do that even if it's "unlimited".

  • by Anonymous Coward

    We know how Microsoft handles "private" user data it has access to.

  • Having private repos is nice and all but CI is equally as important.

    With that said, Gitlab + Gitlab CI is free to use and is a perfect match for solo developers or small teams with private projects, without having to invest in any additional services or infrastructure.

    Where as on Github, if you have private repos, you can't use Travis CI for free, so now you have to choose between Azure pipelines (which is more limiting than Gitlab CI) or use some other free service like CircleCI which is also more limiting

  • by Anonymous Coward

    > "This feels like a sign of goodwill on behalf of Microsoft"

    Translation: "Microsoft has decided to kill BitBucket."

  • I'm currently paying the small fee a month for private repos. (My plan cost is on the order of Netflix and Hulu and the like, something like under 10$ a month.) I'd really like to switch to this new plan, but don't want to lose my current private repos in the process. Any ideas when this will be available on the site, or how to configure your account with this free plan?
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