19 comments

  • jorisw24 minutes ago
    Sentiment for&#x2F;against GitHub aside...<p>&quot;Why X are doing Y&quot; articles like these pretend that the premise of &quot;X are doing Y&quot; is true, conveniently skipping to the &quot;Why&quot; before proving that the premise is even accurate in any meaningful way.<p>This is why I never buy headlines that start out with &quot;Why&quot;.<p>&gt; developers are ditching<p>Proceeds to list but a handful of remotely meaningful repos against the hundreds of thousands on there
    • pjc504 minutes ago
      You can just insert the word &quot;some&quot; as required.
      • jorisw4 minutes ago
        Agreed, but the headline wouldn&#x27;t travel nearly as well, if at all<p>&gt; Why some Americans are switching to soy<p>Would be more accurate than<p>&gt; Why Americans are switching to soy<p>But wouldn&#x27;t garner nearly the same amount of clicks.<p>And there is conscious exaggeration in omitting &#x27;some&#x27;
    • illliillll9 minutes ago
      [dead]
  • benthecarman42 minutes ago
    Our CI for our entire org at <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;github.com&#x2F;lightningdevkit" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;github.com&#x2F;lightningdevkit</a> was turned off for 3 weeks because an outside contributor who was wrongfully banned made a PR. After multiple appeals we received no explanation and was told it was a permanent ban until we made a stir on twitter. They sadly are no longer a good place to work.
  • fmind-dev3 minutes ago
    [delayed]
  • hambos2214 minutes ago
    It&#x27;s been 9 months since I ditched Github.<p>Currently I self-host Gitea [0], use its registry for Docker, NPM etc and act runners [1] for github actions alternative, everything secured under tailnet.<p>I&#x27;m extremely satisfied with that setup. It is batteries included &amp; fire and forget.<p>Now I use Github only as backup by mirroring my self hosted repos.<p>[0] <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;gitea.com" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;gitea.com</a><p>[1] <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;docs.gitea.com&#x2F;usage&#x2F;actions&#x2F;act-runner" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;docs.gitea.com&#x2F;usage&#x2F;actions&#x2F;act-runner</a>
    • onesandofgrain13 minutes ago
      You use github as a backup, why bother self-hosting then?
      • stanac4 minutes ago
        Not GP. Probably less dependencies on github, e.g. actions which sometimes don&#x27;t work. This way github is a &quot;dumb backup&quot;.<p>I selfhost forgejo (gitea fork) on home sever (nuc), similar setup with tailscale. I was planning to setup git mirror on a remote VM for backup, but since I am the only one using it and have everything on dev laptop and remote backups of nuc server I didn&#x27;t bother to do that (I know I still should).
      • hambos225 minutes ago
        Github is an extra layer of backup, among normal backups.
      • close045 minutes ago
        The self hosting will still be there and working as expected no matter what GH does (fails... again, DMCAs the repo, bans the account, etc.). Self hosting isn&#x27;t only about being the <i>only</i> one with the data, it&#x27;s also for the independence aspect. GH as a backup doesn&#x27;t hinder the independence. Network effects are strong and make a lot of developers still have a GH presence as a secondary platform.<p>The evolution is when one can finally fully disconnect from GH, the main self hosted platform will continue to operate as if nothing happened.<p>Se it as a migration, there&#x27;s a period of parallel running.
      • n4r910 minutes ago
        [dead]
  • Scaled8 minutes ago
    For private code, it just feels safer to self host that -- ideally behind wireguard for an extra layer of security.<p>For public code hosting, GitHub have banned too many people&#x2F;projects for comfort. From security researchers to 18+ game devs, too many have been wrongfully banned.
  • 570165240031 minutes ago
    + predatory pricing hikes for AI<p>+ not honouring yearly commitments plans
  • srean7 minutes ago
    Anyone has suggestions for hosting open source hobby projects managed with Mercurial.<p>Loved Bitbucket&#x27;s Mercurial offering. Looking for a replacement.
  • Cider998632 minutes ago
    Why don&#x27;t open source alternatives just copy the UI to make it easier to switch? Everyone knows the GitHub UI and it&#x27;s intuitive. I&#x27;m happy to get more privacy and freedom, you don&#x27;t have to make a worse design just to be different.<p>Fluxer figured this out and they&#x27;re the best discord replacement imo.<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;fluxer.app&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;fluxer.app&#x2F;</a>
    • tjpnz0 minutes ago
      &gt;it&#x27;s intuitive<p>Until you have to work with GHAS, remember whether a project uses rulesets or branch settings or find that comment you wrote on a PR (and then learn that the new PR &quot;experience&quot; fucking hides them over a certain threshold).
    • GoblinSlayer14 minutes ago
      I think they have the same interface. Pull requests are renamed to merge requests, that&#x27;s all the difference I see. Wait for github to reshuffle the ui in a redesign churn.
    • duskdozer24 minutes ago
      Acquiring github users may not be their highest priority.
    • kelvinjps107 minutes ago
      Inst gitea doing this?
    • jorisw15 minutes ago
      &gt; copy the UI<p>Good luck. The amount of features and screens on GitHub are vast aside from just those code &#x2F; issues &#x2F; PRs tabs.
    • allarm25 minutes ago
      I’m not disputing how intuitive the GitHub interface is, but seriously, why is it so hard for technical professionals to set aside 10–20 minutes of their time to learn a new interface? Why has this even become an issue worth discussing?
  • ezoe36 minutes ago
    I guess three nines availability is important.
    • onion2k29 minutes ago
      Not even hitting 1 nine at the moment - <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;mrshu.github.io&#x2F;github-statuses&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;mrshu.github.io&#x2F;github-statuses&#x2F;</a>
      • jopsen22 minutes ago
        I object!<p>The dashboard clearly says 89.15% uptime!<p>Who says nines need to be leading?
        • etdznots13 minutes ago
          With enough precision in the time metric there are infinitely many nines!
  • Havoc12 minutes ago
    Im just glad the wider world has finally snapped out of their GitHub mono culture trance.
  • ahmedehab_0110 minutes ago
    Extreme generalization, most devs aren&#x27;t ditching GitHub yet.
  • rob25 minutes ago
    People are going to copy GitHub the way people copied Facebook… how is &quot;Threads&quot; doing again?
    • etdznots11 minutes ago
      Not good but that’s unsurprising since Thread’s value proposition is indistinguishable from twitter’s. Mastadon and bluesky seem to have healthy userbases though
  • latexr42 minutes ago
    &gt; One new user joins every second<p>Do they? Or is it that <i>a new account is opened</i> every second? Because I’ve been seeing so many spammers and scammers that those numbers have to be skewed.
  • BrenBarn22 minutes ago
    So sad to see that no articles about this even mention Mercurial. This is a golden opportunity for Hg providers to shine.
    • srean9 minutes ago
      I miss Bitbucket&#x27;s mercurial offering.
    • signa1116 minutes ago
      this not a `git` failure per se...
      • BrenBarn4 minutes ago
        Yes, but the thing is just that if people are looking around for new providers it&#x27;s an opportunity for alternative systems to attract attention and users.
        • navigate83100 minutes ago
          I understand what you convey, however, users are tired of the git GUI, not git itself.
  • onesandofgrain15 minutes ago
    self-hosted gitea&#x2F;forgejo is still better
  • sneak40 minutes ago
    Did we all forget that GitHub’s military-industrial complex owners over at Microsoft made sure to send the “business as usual” signal to the USG when they refused to stop helping ICE violate human rights en masse?<p>This was during the kidnap-and-rape-kids-in-cages days and before they started a general policy of kidnapping and&#x2F;or summarily executing law-abiding citizens in the street. There are more reasons now to disassociate with collaborators with the US federal government than ever. I guess I could say I dropped GitHub before it was cool?<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;github.blog&#x2F;news-insights&#x2F;company-news&#x2F;github-and-us-government-developers&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;github.blog&#x2F;news-insights&#x2F;company-news&#x2F;github-and-us...</a><p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;github.com&#x2F;sneak" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;github.com&#x2F;sneak</a><p>Microsoft is a morally bankrupt and despicable organization, just like Meta, Amazon, and modern Google and Apple. Anyone still doing ongoing business with them in 2026 is, imho, a fool.
    • youre-wrong330 minutes ago
      Can’t go a day without propaganda on HN.
    • graemep29 minutes ago
      &gt; Anyone still doing ongoing business with them in 2026 is, imho, a fool.<p>So that would be almost everyone.
  • antonyragleap18 minutes ago
    [flagged]
  • qroole41 minutes ago
    [flagged]
  • cryo3240 minutes ago
    I&#x27;ve ditched Github for all personal stuff. I just keep my repositories offline. I have a reliable backup process so what&#x27;s the point in pushing it there? I don&#x27;t give a shit about public profile, stars or any of that gamified crap and I certainly don&#x27;t trust them.