
Our contribution to the United Nations report on free assembly and association online
Read about how collaboration on GitHub connects to free assembly and association online as part of our input to the United Nations Human Rights Council.
Read about how collaboration on GitHub connects to free assembly and association online as part of our input to the United Nations Human Rights Council.
We’re spending Women’s History Month with women leaders who are making history every day in the tech community. Read more about Rachel White: technologist, artist, pretend-cyborg, and currently the Developer Experience Lead at American Express.
We’re spending Women’s History Month with women leaders who are making history every day in the tech community. Read more about Laura Tacho: director of engineering at CloudBees, a Docker captain, and containers and CI/CD specialist.
Vulcanizer is a Go library for interacting with an Elasticsearch cluster. Its goal is to provide a high-level API to help with common tasks associated with operating an Elasticsearch cluster such as querying health status of the cluster, migrating data off of nodes, updating cluster settings, and more.
Read about some big changes for the coming year: full legal protection for researchers, more GitHub properties eligible for rewards, and increased reward amounts.
Patchwork is headed to Austin! This event is open to newcomers to GitHub and mentors who want to help others learn.
In the spirit of Black History Month, throughout February we’re featuring Black maintainers who are making impactful contributions to the world through open source. William is the maintainer of GitHub…
The EU Copyright Directive has come down to a final vote. Read on for more on what’s at stake and how the developer community shaped the debate.
Mark and Rachel are both maintainers on the End Bias Wiki (EBWiki) project. Read more about their mission to tell the stories of people of color who have died as a result of police action.
We know everyone has their own tooling and workflow preferences, which is why we’re excited to unveil our latest release: user owned project boards. Setting up a personal space for managing your work, ideas or, dare we say, bugs, should be possible…so we created user owned project boards to better support your individual needs.
Update: This blog post is no longer relevant with the update to GitHub Actions in August 2019. See the GitHub Actions documentation for more information. Since the beta release of…
In the spirit of Black History Month, throughout February we’re featuring Black maintainers who are making impactful contributions to the world through open source.
Millions of people rely on GitHub today, from their very first steps on their journey as developers, to contributing their best ideas to the world. Today, I am incredibly excited and honored to join GitHub to lead the Product Team.
Complete our training to become an Advisor and get free access to GitHub across all of your departments.
We’re excited to share GitHub’s 2018 Transparency Report, a by-the-numbers look at how we handle requests for user data and moderate content on GitHub.
We’re sharing new and exciting releases from world-changing technologies to weekend side projects in the December 2018 edition of Release Radar.
Reaction emoji options now include 🚀 and 👀. Learn more about reactions
Do you contribute to open source software (OSS)? We’d love to hear your perspective.
We are excited to release GitHub Desktop 1.6, bringing new features and improvements around onboarding, suggested next steps, and large file restrictions.
With their new “Star” button, every GitHub Topic gets you closer to the stuff you care about most.
Today we’re announcing two major updates to make GitHub more accessible to developers.
Build what’s next on GitHub, the place for anyone from anywhere to build anything.
Last chance: Save $700 on your IRL pass to Universe and join us on Oct. 28-29 in San Francisco.