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by NobodyNada 1 hour ago
10 years ago, GitHub had a far better reputation and the Rust ecosystem was much smaller and less load-bearing, so "what if someone doesn't have a GitHub account" was a theoretical concern for most people. So the issue was a low-priority backlog item that everyone agreed would be nice-to-have but there weren't enough people willing to volunteer their time to it over more important and more impactful work.

Obviously, the situation has changed in recent years, so it's now considered a much higher priority by many people and some of them are actively working on it. But it's a lot of work to be done by volunteers, so it takes time.

That's the reality of open-source projects: things get done when they are important enough to motivate someone to either fund it or work on in their free time, not according to idyllic roadmaps and schedules.

3 comments

The reason people were sounding the alarm 10 years ago is because if you tie yourself to a proprietary platform then you're at its mercy, even if it changes for the worse for everyone which is what we're seeing now.
The comment you are replying to was in response to essentially the same point, albeit with fewer words and less emphasis.
Wow, have you forgotten? https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Embrace,_extend,_and_extinguis...

10 (edit: 8) years ago MS took over Github. The writing was on the wall then...

No need to explain OSS to me, I maintain and contribute.

crates.io was started long before the GitHub acquisition.
Yes, and your point?
Pro tip: Using "load-bearing" is heavily associated with LLM usage :)
You could say it’s the real smoking gun. With significant blast radius.
This is where I would insert the Little Britain "Computer says no" meme.