Up until now, if a firm wanted to host its private development on GitHub, it had to subscribe to one of the premium plans starting from $7 a month. Last year, the company made private repositories available for the free tier, users but with restrictions such as the number of collaborators. Apart from private repository access, a team can also get 2,000 GitHub action minutes per month at no cost. Actions is GitHub’s automation tool offering which lets applications orchestrate any workflow based on an event — like sending a notification. So, the free tier offering is ideal for small-scale projects. [Read: Google’s AutoML Zero lets the machines create algorithms to avoid human bias] If you want some advanced features, such as code owners to have better control of the project, you’ll need to pay $4 instead of $9 for teams. In an Q&A session hosted on Hacker News, CEO Nat Friedman said GitHub wanted to roll out this change for the last 18 months: Currently, GitHub has more than 40 million developers on the platform, and it aiming 100 million developers by 2025. Making premium features available for everyone without cost can be a step in the right direction to achieve that number. We also retained our Team pricing plan for people who need email support (and a couple of other features like code owners). In general we think that every developer on earth should be able to use GitHub for their work, and so it is great to remove price as a barrier.

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