GitHub Copilot is moving to usage-based billing
Starting June 1, your Copilot usage will consume GitHub AI Credits. The post GitHub Copilot is moving to usage-based billing appeared first on The GitHub Blog .
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Starting June 1, your Copilot usage will consume GitHub AI Credits. The post GitHub Copilot is moving to usage-based billing appeared first on The GitHub Blog .
Panics in Rust Workers were historically fatal, poisoning the entire instance. By collaborating upstream on the wasm‑bindgen project, Rust Workers now support resilient critical error recovery, including panic unwinding using WebAssembly Exception Handling.
As AI assistants and privacy proxies challenge the capabilities of traditional bot detection, the Web needs new models for accountability. We believe that control should remain with the client, and that an open ecosystem of anonymous credentials is key to preserving user privacy while protecting origins from abuse.
We're making these changes to ensure a reliable and predictable experience for existing customers. The post Changes to GitHub Copilot Individual plans appeared first on The GitHub Blog .
The open source Git project just released Git 2.54. Here is GitHub’s look at some of the most interesting features and changes introduced since last time. The post Highlights from Git 2.54 appeared first on The GitHub Blog .
Agents Week 2026 is a wrap. Let’s take a look at everything we announced, from compute and security to the agent toolbox, platform tools, and the emerging agentic web. Everything we shipped for the agentic cloud.
We built our internal AI engineering stack on the same products we ship. That means 20 million requests routed through AI Gateway, 241 billion tokens processed, and inference running on Workers AI, serving more than 3,683 internal users. Here's how we did it.
Learn about how we built a CI-native AI code reviewer using OpenCode that helps our engineers ship better, safer code.
See how we created an emoji list generator during the Rubber Duck Thursday stream. The post Building an emoji list generator with the GitHub Copilot CLI appeared first on The GitHub Blog .
Changes to the status page will provide more specific data, so you'll have better insight into the overall health of the platform. The post Bringing more transparency to GitHub’s status page appeared first on The GitHub Blog .
The Agent Readiness score can help site owners understand how well their websites support AI agents. Here we explore new standards, share Radar data, and detail how we made Cloudflare’s docs the most agent-friendly on the web.
Today, we’re excited to give you a sneak peek of our support for shared compression dictionaries, show you how it improves page load times, and reveal when you’ll be able to try the beta yourself.
Soft directives don’t stop crawlers from ingesting deprecated content. Redirects for AI Training allows anybody on Cloudflare to redirect verified crawlers to canonical pages with one toggle and no origin changes.
Running LLMs across Cloudflare’s network requires us to be smarter and more efficient about GPU memory bandwidth. That’s why we developed Unweight, a lossless inference-time compression system that achieves up to a 22% model footprint reduction, so that we can deliver faster and cheaper inference than ever before.
Cloudflare Agent Memory is a managed service that gives AI agents persistent memory, allowing them to recall what matters, forget what doesn't, and get smarter over time.
Learn how Github uses eBPF to detect and prevent circular dependencies in its deployment tooling. The post How GitHub uses eBPF to improve deployment safety appeared first on The GitHub Blog .
Learn about the productivity tool one GitHub engineer built, and how AI supported the development process. The post Build a personal organization command center with GitHub Copilot CLI appeared first on The GitHub Blog .
We’re sharing recent policy updates that developers should know about, updating our Transparency Center with the full year of 2025 data, and looking to what’s ahead. The post Developer policy update: Intermediary liability, copyright, and transparency appeared first on The GitHub Blog .
Learn to find and exploit real-world agentic AI vulnerabilities through five progressive challenges in this free, open source game that over 10,000 developers have already used to sharpen their security skills. The post Hack the AI agent: Build agentic AI security skills with the GitHub Secure Code Game appeared first on The GitHub Blog .
The new Code Security Risk Assessment gives you a one-click view of vulnerabilities across your organization, at no cost. The post How exposed is your code? Find out in minutes—for free appeared first on The GitHub Blog .