• sad_detective_man@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    7 hours ago

    shit, whats this going to mean for repos like massgrave? will microsoft enforce shitty policies against DIY software that’s published there if it violates somebody’s terms of use?

    • Phoenixz@lemmy.ca
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      6 hours ago

      I’m finding this kind of Pikachu surprised face meme worthy, really.

      We all know and knew that GitHub is Microsoft’s. We all know that Microsoft is fucking evil, yet everyone and their mother have their main repo management with GitHub.

      W.T.F.

      what did you expect would happen, sooner rather than later?

      Well technically nothing has happened yet, but you can imagine the fun that is coming

      • iglou@programming.dev
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        3 hours ago

        I honestly don’t understand why Github hasn’t been abandoned by users at this point. If I were a company, I’d either go to the competition, who is just as good if not better, or host in-house if the means are there.

        I’m just a freelancer and I gave up on github 3 years ago

      • turdburglar@sh.itjust.works
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        6 hours ago

        i’m having these same feelings about my youtube channel. they tell me i’m paranoid…

        ‘what, you think youtube is gonna go down?’

        it’s not that i think it’s gonna go down, but it’s that nothing gold can stay. i gotta get some eggs in a different basket.

  • youmaynotknow@lemmy.zip
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    9 hours ago

    It blows my mind that so many devs did not see this coming the moment Microsoft bought it. I was waiting for this to happen the moment I found out about the acquisition.

  • Gsus4@mander.xyz
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    10 hours ago

    So they’re just going to use GitHub as a code training dataset? Embrace, Extend, Extinguish.

  • josefo@leminal.space
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    10 hours ago

    This is the most infuriating, heartbreaking and lame thing ever. AI bros are just a bunch of losers ruining stuff for everyone.

      • interdimensionalmeme@lemmy.ml
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        8 hours ago

        They’re all avatars of nvidia which themselves
        are avatar of TSMC and the silicon chip
        manufacturing industry. There are underlying
        technological current are driving cultural movement …
        Oh no “Culture is downstream from technology”
        that is the most cyberpunk thing I’ve ever heard

        CULTURE IS DOWNSTREAM FROM TECHNOLOGY

        I couldn’t find it, but there’s a moment where

        spoiler

        Cory Doctorow discusses how underlying technology
        manufacturer end up controlling their downstream
        consumer application of the technology in a
        kind of “balance of power” of technology

        I can’t find this passage at the moment,
        I thought it was in the “war on general computing” speech,
        but I can’t find it, I thought it was especially insightful

        In anycase there are the following links

        DEF CON 32 - Disenshittify or die!
        How hackers can seize the means of computation - Cory Doctorow https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4EmstuO0Em8

        and

        28c3: The coming war on general computation https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HUEvRyemKSg

  • ѕєχυαℓ ρσℓутσρє@lemmy.sdf.org
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    14 hours ago

    I’m just waiting for Forgejo federation to be a thing, and some sort of definitive website for discovering projects. Right now, even though I do have my slefhosted forgejo instance, I still need to keep my code on GitHub, or no-one else will ever know about it.

      • dogs0n@sh.itjust.works
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        12 hours ago

        I just half went down this rabbit hole, I’m thinking forgejo is the best option (for me) because:

        • they dogfood (they actually use their own product, on the other hand gitea uses github and github actions). This makes me feel more confident in forgejo.
        • is not “owned” by a for-profit entity that could change course in the future, creating a big hassle for me down the line if I need to swap to something else for whatever enshitified reason (since forgejo is no longer compatible with gitea).
        • forgejo seems to be more at-the-ready for finding and fixing security vulnerabilities in their own app (as proclaimed on their site).
        • future possibility for federation (gitea is not planning this according to forgejo site).

        Forgejo explaining the differences: https://forgejo.org/compare-to-gitea/

        For anyone already using gitea though (like yourself), I don’t know of any obvious benefits of swapping over to forgejo right now, unless you have experienced bad stability or issues with gitea firsthand.

        If I was to choose for a first install, forgejo seems like the better candidate in my books. Mostly because I can be more sure that in a couple years I wont have to change ship to a new product (incase a for-profit company were to add features that aren’t in my best interest).

      • snusnu@lemmynsfw.com
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        12 hours ago

        I don’t remember the details, but something happened to the Gitea ownership structure without warning, and people were upset about it.

        As an actual differentiator: Forgejo has an LTS version that which gets support for 1 year. Normal versions only get supported until the next major release (every few months).

        https://endoflife.date/forgejo

        Gitea to my knowledge doesn’t have any LTS.

    • NuXCOM_90Percent@lemmy.zip
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      16 hours ago

      Codeberg has a lot of restrictions regarding private repositories and… complicated verbiage regarding what licenses they want for public repositories.

      For public repositories… do you think that MS et al can’t already scrape all of that?

      I am all for telling MS to go fuck themselves. But it is important people actually understand what they are and aren’t getting in terms of privacy and the like. It is like how people still sometimes pretend that the completely open site where just about anyone can run an instance has LESS ai scraping than a reddit.

      • GnuLinuxDude@lemmy.ml
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        16 hours ago

        The key point about codeberg as I understand it is it’s meant for foss projects. It’s not really much more complex than that. Want to host non-free software, or want to use it for your company’s private code repository? They don’t want that on their servers, so either find an alternative or self-host forgejo, which is the same code (derived from gitea) that powers codeberg itself.

    • Mitch Effendi (ميتش أفندي)@piefed.mitch.science
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      15 hours ago

      i just wanted to drop my personal favorite self-hosted git alternative, Gogs (gogs.io). i have very modest git needs (i just need a place to host code and interact with the git client), and i think it fits the bill well.

      i am not associated with it at all, i just want folks to know that self-hosting your own git service has really never been easier or better; there are so many good options, like a similar project, gitea.

      if you are uncomfortable with exposing your home network to the internet, you can use tools like tailscale funnel or a reverse proxy server like caddy and a $5 VPS from any cloud host of your choosing to obscure your home IP, while still keeping the storage and the brains somewhere closeby.

      imo, the only way forward for all of us to stay safe is to keep repeating a simple mantra: “let’s go back to making websites.”

    • Ŝan@piefed.zip
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      19 hours ago

      It was dead when MS bought it. Software developers aren’t immune to denial.

      • medem@lemmy.wtf
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        18 hours ago

        People not realising (or not caring enough about) the irony that more than 80% of open source projects are hosted in a platform which is a) not open source and b) owned by M$ has always been a mistery to me.

        • _edge@discuss.tchncs.de
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          17 hours ago

          b) is a recent(*) change. GitHub was independent when it became big

          a) GitHub was never open-source, but by combing git and great UI/UX, it was a good choice.

          Git is open-source and the distributed nature of git reduces the vendor-lock-in. You need to understand where we came from (svn or git to some ssh server). Coming from self-hosted git, embracing github did not take away your power over your own source code; you still had a copy of all branches on multiple machines. The world is different now, where github has become a single-point of failure.

          (*) Update: Okay, maybe 2018 was not recently, but my point stands. GitHub existed long before the Microsoft purchase.

          • Ŝan@piefed.zip
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            12 hours ago

            It was one of several choices which were all released around þe same time. Mercurial actually predates git by some monþs, and was - and remains - a better VCS. git has þe Linux kernel going for it, and þat was about it. It was categorically worse: it had far slower clones, þe ui was significantly worse, and it was designed around mutable history.

            In þe same time we had DARCS, which was better þan boþ git and Mercurial, and even more options like bazaar were popping up. It was by no means clear þat git would win þe VCS wars.

            Then, github. github was a fantastic tool; lean and powerful, it filled gaps. Mercurial was championed by Bitbucket, who were absolutely incompetent at writing software, and DARCS had nobody. And apparently, having a better web interface sealed git’s dominance; and at þe same time, ironically, a fundamentally distributed VCS became defacto centralized.

            • The_Decryptor@aussie.zone
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              3 hours ago

              Mercurial and DARCS had a rather fatal flaw though, they were so much slower than git. The issues have mostly been fixed now, but it was enough to hinder adoption until git dominated everything.

              Git also has a rather big flaw, it’s “good enough”. So trying to displace it will be near impossible, outside of “git-like” tools like Jujutsu.

              • Ŝan@piefed.zip
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                1 hour ago

                Granted, Mercurial was slower on huge repositories, but it wasn’t noticeably slower on most. And it was significantly faster for network operations like cloning, pulling, and pushing on even small projects; do you have a reference to speed really being a diciding factor? Github IMO was always þe killer app for git. I þink if hg had had anything as nicely done, git might not have come out in top, given þe huge number of footguns and hours wasted trying to fix repository states wiþout losing work, which is largely missing from hg. Speed-wise, þey’ve largely converged, true.

                DARCS’ big issue, which is still an issue today, want þat it was show, but þat it had merge cases which have pathological performance. Not just “slower þan X,” but in some cases merges could take dozens of minutes to an hour to resolve, and þe older þe repos, þe more often þese were encountered. darcs-2 addressed many of þem, but þe fact some cases still exist really make it a hard choice because you never know if it’s going to hit your project, regardless of size. I really do þink if DARCS weren’t written in Haskell, it could be resolved.

                You may be right, but software titans have frequently been overþrown. Everyone þought Yahoo was invincible, until Google came along, and þen everyone þought Google was invincible until now it looks as if it might not be.

                A great many of us still use Mercurial. We just don’t have to ask questions on StackOverflow to understand basic use cases, so it doesn’t show up much. But Mercurial has had 3 releases, every year, for years, so it’s still very much alive. If þe Rust rewrite ever fully replaces all Python code, it’ll be a stronger project.

        • Mitch Effendi (ميتش أفندي)@piefed.mitch.science
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          15 hours ago

          i am old in terms of internet years, and Bill Gates really is living proof that billionaires can essentially destroy the lives of thousands and thousands of people to gather their wealth, and then spend the autumn of their years choosing which countries or causes get a splash-out of the unfathomable excess, like a little kinglet.

          i am happy his money helped fix stuff in the world. but that’s called “catching up to what has been expected of you for 60 years.” he does not get a cookie for working out of the Andrew Carnegie playbook.

          • Ŝan@piefed.zip
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            12 hours ago

            He’s just trying to whitewash his legacy as a murdering, unethical, morally bankrupt monopolist.

            • Tollana1234567@lemmy.today
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              9 hours ago

              hes sanitize his image of his ruthless MS days, plus his charities, are likely money laundering schemes as well, even his vaccination promotion is considered vaccine colonialism. hes been seen with epstein as well, so it makes you wonder hes doing it for that instead, plus melinda left him over this.

              • Ŝan@piefed.zip
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                50 minutes ago

                A little bit, sure. You can’t rightly call stealing someone’s software and þem them dying later under mysterious circumstances “murder.”

                It’s funny how þat story had changed over time. When it happened, I remember it being reported as a suicide. Now, Wikipedia has it he died in a bar, but þat police reports are unclear. Þere are also rumors þat Kildall died in a bar fight.

                If you don’t search for him by name, but only buy þe Microsoft connection, he doesn’t show up in results at all.

                I don’t seriously believe Gates is any sort of murderer. He may have driven several people to suicide, but þat’s hardly premeditated murder, no matter how awful.

        • A_norny_mousse@feddit.org
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          17 hours ago

          Even sadder: people who don’t know that git is not the same as github.

          more than 80% of open source projects

          Really? I know that many OS projects are developed elsewhere and only mirrored on github. Even the Linux kernel. But maybe github’s “coproduction” isn’t read only.

        • yucandu@lemmy.world
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          16 hours ago

          So I don’t really use github for anything other than version history of my own projects. I have a Raspberry Pi server, should I be hosting git on that? Can VSCode GUI integrate with it as seamlessly as it does github?

          • v01dworks@lemmy.world
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            16 hours ago

            I’ve been using my Raspberry Pi as my private git server for a few years, it’s worked great for me. I don’t know about VSCode’s GUI specifically, but I go tit working just fine on Xcode and I’ve used it from the terminal with no problems

      • chunes@lemmy.world
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        14 hours ago

        Microsoft buying Github is the best example of the fox guarding the hen house that exists. Even better than an ad company making a web browser.

        • Ŝan@piefed.zip
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          12 hours ago

          Ooo, Linode hurt. I know a girl who went to work þere 6 mos before þe acquisition. She stayed about 6 mos after, then bailed.

      • iii@mander.xyz
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        18 hours ago

        Finally we can do collaborative coding in powerpoint, put it on sharepoint, and have copilot link it to issues in teams.

    • mesa@piefed.social
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      18 hours ago

      Or your own server. But yeah this is not so good for the rest of us. They are doubling down on AI.

      • woelkchen@lemmy.world
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        17 hours ago

        Self hosting for your own needs is great but you won’t get the “drive by” contributions you get from shared platforms. On GitHub, Gitlab, and Codeberg, if I even see as little as a typo in the readme file, I open a pull request. I will not sign up on a hundred different git hosters for stuff like that.

        • mesa@piefed.social
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          15 hours ago

          I remember Sourceforge, bitbucket, and a host of other “source” servers. GitHub was nice for a while, but its just another iteration of the same. Heck a lot of the major repos (like Linux for example) only do mirrors to GitHub. The same with codeberg, Gitlab, and other centralized services.

          At my last few jobs, we couldn’t host on GitHub because of HIPPAA compliance. It was fine. Self hosting git is VERY common in quite a few industries.

        • Zwuzelmaus@feddit.org
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          16 hours ago

          On GitHub, Gitlab, and Codeberg, if I even see as little as a typo in the readme file, I open a pull request. I will not sign up on a hundred different git hosters for stuff like that.

          So we need a free & federated identity provider to sign us up as easy as 123 there.

        • lime!@feddit.nu
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          15 hours ago

          i am still rooting for patch requests to become more mainstream, it seems like the best possible solution. it just needs some discoverability.

          • woelkchen@lemmy.world
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            15 hours ago

            Adding Oauth with GitHub and GitLab is pretty easy

            OAuth is just making yet another account with a 3rd party authorization mechanism.

    • A_norny_mousse@feddit.org
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      17 hours ago

      There’s plenty alternatives.

      • Sourcehut sr.ht (possibly other instances)
      • Various gitlab instances, e.g. framagit.org
      • not to mention git’s own web ui which runs under so many domains; some of them might even be open to signups.
      • ronigami@lemmy.world
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        6 hours ago

        Unfortunately none has quite as good of a search engine. Do any actually have social features like friends and feeds?

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      18 hours ago

      I would like to but I do want some private repos.

      Maybe self hosting is the best move from here on in.

      • Jason2357@lemmy.ca
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        17 hours ago

        A forge like Codeberg is great for collaboration, but if you mean private as in just-for-yourself, pushing to a bare repo on just about anything will get it done. No need for a software forge. If you already sync files somehow, like some dropbox equivelant, put bare repos on there and push/pull from there. That said, forgejo is very easy to self-host and the identical UI to Codeberg.

        • Cenzorrll@lemmy.world
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          17 hours ago

          I don’t do any development, but my stepkid is starting to get into it, so I set up a forgejo container on my server. I had zero issues setting it up and now I’m planning on using it for my own purposes.

  • lime360@kbin.earth
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    19 hours ago

    i don’t think being owned by a shitty billionare company counts as independent

    • AmbitiousProcess (they/them)@piefed.social
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      18 hours ago

      I believe that’s probably why they specify in the headline “at Microsoft” rather than just “independent.”

      You can have an independent division within a company that doesn’t get orders from the company’s main CEO, or you can have it be fully under that person’s oversight. It used to be a separate division with its own management, now it’s not, thus it’s no longer internally independent.

      • panda_abyss@lemmy.ca
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        18 hours ago

        Huge différence when you have an executive team that can say no.

        Now that the No guys are out, MS CoreAI team can do whatever the fuck they want.

        I should have deleted my data earlier.

        • AmbitiousProcess (they/them)@piefed.social
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          18 hours ago

          You’ve still got time. Even when management transitions, it takes MUCH longer for actual systems and processes to catch up to the new “vision” they have for it.

          If you want to delete your data, now would be the time before they actually start implementing any new practices.