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GitHub is Laying Off 10% of Staff and Cutting Down Office Space (fortune.com) 33

Microsoft-owned GitHub is laying off 10% of its staff. From a report: In a message to staff on Thursday, GitHub's CEO Thomas Dohmke said that due to "new budgetary realignments" the company must reduce the workforce "by up to 10% through the end of FY23." The company is also going fully remote, Dohmke wrote, telling staff they're "seeing very low utilization rates" in their offices. "We are not vacating offices immediately, but will move to close all of our offices as their leases end or as we are operationally able to do so," Dohmke wrote.

"We announced a number of difficult but necessary decisions and budgetary realignments to both protect the health of our business in the short term and grant us the capacity to invest in our long-term strategy moving forward," a GitHub spokesperson told Fortune in a written statement. The company declined to comment on whether these cuts are a part of Microsoft's layoffs that impacted 10,000 employees last month.

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GitHub is Laying Off 10% of Staff and Cutting Down Office Space

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  • by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Thursday February 09, 2023 @03:21PM (#63279527)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • Not really... (Score:3, Insightful)

      by SuperKendall ( 25149 )

      Everyone migrated to SourceForge already after Satan bought github right?

      Moving to SourceForge is a hard sell even when Satan is running GitHub.

      GitHub just IS, you know?

      • I mean, there is GitLab and you don't even need to pay, just self host and unlimited CI time.
        • Comes down to control versus convenience. We have our own git server that's rather locked down; but our university also offers enterprise github at no cost to departments. I have several projects on the university server; but then there are things I'm comfortable putting on our own server that I'd need to think harder about if they went on the university github, even in a private repo - since arguably we don't have ultimate say over access to the latter.

          • by Junta ( 36770 )

            Thing about gitlab is it really isn't particularly hard to run. Particlularly if you are serving a small group with an instance and have a relatively simple authentication scheme.

            • If we had a broader user base, I might go to the trouble of running gitlab. Since it's only for our computing group purposes, though, we just have our shared repos on a server that only accepts ssh login from members of our group.

              I should talk to the guys on the Windows side, though. They might find a gui easier to use.

              • by Junta ( 36770 )

                Pretty much the GUI was the reason I bothered. Particularly to facilitate merge requests in a UI comfortable enough for everybody to participate.

        • 7% layoffs at gitlab (Score:4, Informative)

          by StandardDeviant ( 122674 ) on Thursday February 09, 2023 @03:36PM (#63279587) Homepage Journal
    • Everyone migrated to SourceForge already after Satan bought github right?

      You mean the site owned by the same people who turned Slashdot into a crypto-whoring, Elon-fellating shitshow? Fuck no. Sourceforge was terrible even before the latest clowns bought them. Everyone migrated to gitlab.

    • by q4Fry ( 1322209 )

      Codeberg.org and/or Sourcehut.org

      • by dskoll ( 99328 )

        Codeberg and Sourcehut are both good options, and if you maintain Free Software / Open-Source Software, you can ask for an account on salsa.debian.org (which runs GitLab.)

    • Damn, we forgot we had to do this, instead we bought github stickers...
  • I just know there's a few /.ers scratching their heads, trying to figure out an angle to portraying a code repository as "too woke" so they can blame the layoffs on that.

    Gotta blame something besides the economic downturn that totally isn't happening. How about that Chinese spy balloon? Perhaps it sent out economy-destroying rays and now there's gonna be layoffs the likes of which this country has never seen. Well played, China.

  • Scraped enough code from the repositories that they no longer care? Embrace, extend, extinguish?

The hardest part of climbing the ladder of success is getting through the crowd at the bottom.

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