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Introducing new ways to keep your code secure

It’s more important than ever that every developer becomes a security developer—that they responsibly disclose vulnerabilities and patch vulnerable code quickly. Today, we’re excited to announce several new security features designed to make it easier for developers to secure their code.

Justin Hutchings
An illustration of two octocats repairing a robot.

GitHub Sponsors (beta)

Currently in limited public beta, GitHub Sponsors is a tool to financially support the developers who build the open source software you use every day. Open source developers can now…

Stephanie Wills
Git ransom campaign incident report—Atlassian Bitbucket, GitHub, GitLab

Git ransom campaign incident report—Atlassian Bitbucket, GitHub, GitLab

Today, Atlassian Bitbucket, GitHub, and GitLab are issuing a joint blog post in a coordinated effort to help educate and inform users of the three platforms on secure best practices relating to the recent Git ransomware incident. Though there is no evidence Atlassian Bitbucket, GitHub, or GitLab products were compromised in any way, we believe it’s important to help the software development community better understand and collectively take steps to protect against this threat.

John Swanson
GitHub Leadership Spotlight: Kathy Pham, Computer Scientist and Product Leader, Mozilla and Harvard

Leader spotlight: Kathy Pham

Every March we recognize the women who have shaped history—and now, we’re taking a look forward. From driving software development in large companies to maintaining thriving open source communities, we’re…

Lorena Mesa