@Blort But github was already a closed source product monetizing analytics and metadata to stay afloat, selling toolkits to recruiters.
If Microsoft does the exact same thing does that make it any different?
But if you do move, please consider Gitea over Gitlab, Gitlab is just another Github w/ a better whitelabel implementation.
@Blort As I have pointed out, I think that that right is actually very problematic and most developers of software do not want the responsibility it brings.
I think it's not a slam dunk to say that users should have unlimited rights because it strongly disenfranchises creators. It purports to make everyone a software creator, but actually discourages shared code due to writer liability.
@Elucidating It was a problem before Microsoft, and it's still a problem with Microsoft. Of course Microsoft has a longer history of exploiting the problems if proprietary code, but regardless, the point remains the same. If we believe in the freedom to own, share, learn from and modify our code for the benefit of all, then we should with our hosting tools, as with our other coffee and infrastructure.