#codeforges — Public Fediverse posts
Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #codeforges, aggregated by home.social.
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Oh and if you're still using GritHub as your code forge, obliging people to have and use a GH account to file bugs and push patches, you're collaborating with BorgSoft. Who have been knowingly enabling ethnic profiling for years, and continued to do so as it segued into genocide.
Please, don't do that.
I use and recommend CodeBerg, but there are many options. This list needs updating but gives a sense of the variety that existed a few years ago;
https://wiki.p2pfoundation.net/List_of_Community-Hosted_Code_Forge_Instances
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On the subject of the ongoing enshittification of GritHub, we've been here before. From a post on my #Disintermedia blog in its early days;
"SF.net has since reimplemented its stack in Python, beginning in 2009 as a new free code project called Allura under the Apache 2.0 license, and in June 2011, a piece was posted on the SourceForge blog which finished off, 'pull up a chair, because we’re here to stay'."
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On the subject of the ongoing enshittification of GritHub, we've been here before. From a post on my #Disintermedia blog in its early days;
"SF.net has since reimplemented its stack in Python, beginning in 2009 as a new free code project called Allura under the Apache 2.0 license, and in June 2011, a piece was posted on the SourceForge blog which finished off, 'pull up a chair, because we’re here to stay'."
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On the subject of the ongoing enshittification of GritHub, we've been here before. From a post on my #Disintermedia blog in its early days;
"SF.net has since reimplemented its stack in Python, beginning in 2009 as a new free code project called Allura under the Apache 2.0 license, and in June 2011, a piece was posted on the SourceForge blog which finished off, 'pull up a chair, because we’re here to stay'."
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On the subject of the ongoing enshittification of GritHub, we've been here before. From a post on my #Disintermedia blog in its early days;
"SF.net has since reimplemented its stack in Python, beginning in 2009 as a new free code project called Allura under the Apache 2.0 license, and in June 2011, a piece was posted on the SourceForge blog which finished off, 'pull up a chair, because we’re here to stay'."
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@dmian
> I’ve finished migrating my active #GitHub repos to CodebergEvery project that leaves GritHub for good is another measurable dent in the network effects of an enshittified, proprietary platform. Now owned by one of the oldest #DataFarming corporations, who were the earliest enemies of groups working for people's software rights and freedoms.
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It's been far too long since I haven't updated this properly, but here's a snapshot of some open source communities that have already moved off GritHub;
https://wiki.p2pfoundation.net/List_of_Community-Hosted_Code_Forge_Instances
It seems like forge federation is a harder problem to crack than we thought when BorgSoft bought GH. But I'm still hopeful that one day, many of these forges will interoperate to create the experience of a unified code forging space.
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It's been far too long since I haven't updated this properly, but here's a snapshot of some open source communities that have already moved off GritHub;
https://wiki.p2pfoundation.net/List_of_Community-Hosted_Code_Forge_Instances
It seems like forge federation is a harder problem to crack than we thought when BorgSoft bought GH. But I'm still hopeful that one day, many of these forges will interoperate to create the experience of a unified code forging space.
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It's been far too long since I haven't updated this properly, but here's a snapshot of some open source communities that have already moved off GritHub;
https://wiki.p2pfoundation.net/List_of_Community-Hosted_Code_Forge_Instances
It seems like forge federation is a harder problem to crack than we thought when BorgSoft bought GH. But I'm still hopeful that one day, many of these forges will interoperate to create the experience of a unified code forging space.
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It's been far too long since I haven't updated this properly, but here's a snapshot of some open source communities that have already moved off GritHub;
https://wiki.p2pfoundation.net/List_of_Community-Hosted_Code_Forge_Instances
It seems like forge federation is a harder problem to crack than we thought when BorgSoft bought GH. But I'm still hopeful that one day, many of these forges will interoperate to create the experience of a unified code forging space.
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Also experimenting on a contribution model that's not locked in to a specific platform
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Code forges could significantly reduce the emotional labour of project maintainers by adding a separate tracker for "Bugs", next to the one for "Issues". Maintainers could then turn off notifications for Issues, without missing notifications about bugs. If people started making features requests or starting general discussions in the bug tracker, all the maintainer would need to do is move them to Issues and ignore them.
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@njoseph
> My code is mostly on Debian Salsa and my own Gitweb. Recently started using Codeberg tooGreat stuff. The more we ignore the BorgSoft propaganda that HutGub is where the action is and move elsewhere, the less true that propaganda is.
Bring on forge federation!
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While you're waiting for GitHub to stop being broken, you might want to check out a self-hosting alternative called @forgejo at:
Alternatively, if you just want a Forgejo instance to sign up on, check out @Codeberg at:
Forgejo is free open source software, and is a community-run hard fork of Gitea.
#GitHub #GitHubDown #CodeForges #Dev #SoftwareDevelopment #SelfHosting #CommunityHosting
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After a long break, I just started updating the list of community-hosted code forges here;
https://wiki.p2pfoundation.net/List_of_Community-Hosted_Code_Forge_Instances
... as well as the brief intro to forge decentralisation projects at the top. If you have a P2PF wiki account, feel free to contribute. Otherwise, feel free to hit me up here with things that need updating.