Organic Maps migrates to Forgejo due to GitHub account blocked by Microsoft.
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I think the point above currently we are relying on mega corps data centers and there is not practical way to replace that right now or in the near future.
With that being said, every household could theoretically have a small sever and we all can create clusters to support local needs needs with out having to pay the toll to the parasite.
Today's self hosting pinoneers could be the back bone of future decentralized internet.
Take a look at meshtastic, https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Meshtastic
Not exactly what you are talking about but it's a local tech solution for communication
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So now we know how to instantly delist any project on GitHub.
My guess is there is an admin that knows where each contributor is from. And can approve or decline check in requests.
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cross-posted from: https://feddit.org/post/9959466
geteilt von: https://programming.dev/post/27692275
organic maps ftw!
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Not that I condone Microsoft, but if it is a sanctioned country (Russia, Iran, North Korea, etc.). Microsoft will be in shit with the US government if they let it there.
If the project has contributors from there, then I guess they need to move off GitHub like they did.
If I interpret this toot correctly, there wasn’t a direct commit from a sanctioned region, but one developer was in one of those regions for a short while quite some time ago. And he may have been flagged because of this.
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https://feddit.org/post/9959466/5697405
[why blocked?]
"a contributor made a push from a sanctioned region is what i saw. not even a main dev, and they didn’t receive any warning is my understanding. i might be way off, i’m not a final source:That's strange. A lot of people from Russia continue contributing on GitHub without any issues.
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This is the benefit of using distributed tools like git.
Yeah, the code history is the easiest thing to migrate. The other stuff like issues relies on having a good exporting/importing tool on both sides.
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YMMV. I've seen issues in migration from Gitea to Codeberg. Always test first.
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cross-posted from: https://feddit.org/post/9959466
geteilt von: https://programming.dev/post/27692275
If this doesn't spur on an antitrust suit in the EU, I don't know what will.
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If this doesn't spur on an antitrust suit in the EU, I don't know what will.
It probably won't, they were banned due to sanctions that the EU completely support. Though they were unblocked so it raises questions was the ban even legitimate and also why it took 2 weeks to unban them.
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Not that I condone Microsoft, but if it is a sanctioned country (Russia, Iran, North Korea, etc.). Microsoft will be in shit with the US government if they let it there.
If the project has contributors from there, then I guess they need to move off GitHub like they did.
wrote on last edited by [email protected].
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This is the benefit of using distributed tools like git.
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Not that I condone Microsoft, but if it is a sanctioned country (Russia, Iran, North Korea, etc.). Microsoft will be in shit with the US government if they let it there.
If the project has contributors from there, then I guess they need to move off GitHub like they did.
If they can tell they're from a banned region why are they letting them push in the first place. Sounds like a convenient excuse.
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If I interpret this toot correctly, there wasn’t a direct commit from a sanctioned region, but one developer was in one of those regions for a short while quite some time ago. And he may have been flagged because of this.
That seems bullshit.
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Yea tons of devs treat all of these platforms like the central host, but you can host it on all of them at once lol
Wonder if there's a tool for compiling all issues from seperate sources to allow devs with repos hosted on several different platforms to respond easier.
Also feels like a way to get repeat issues more frequently
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Wonder if there's a tool for compiling all issues from seperate sources to allow devs with repos hosted on several different platforms to respond easier.
Also feels like a way to get repeat issues more frequently
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cross-posted from: https://feddit.org/post/9959466
geteilt von: https://programming.dev/post/27692275
Forgejo seems pretty good, I'll move my stuff there too
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