Microsoft reportedly buys GitHub code-sharing service
Here's the biggest news of the week: Microsoft has reportedly acquired GitHub and could announce a deal in likely worth billions of dollars as soon as Monday.
For those unaware, GitHub is a popular code repository hosting service that allows developers to host their projects, documentation, and code in the cloud using the popular Git source management system, invented in 2005 by Linux founder Linus Torvalds.
GitHub is used by many developers and big tech companies including Apple, Amazon, Google, Facebook, and IBM to store their corporate code and privately collaborate on software, but Microsoft is one of the top contributors to the web-hosting service.
Microsoft has uploaded several of its most important projects, including
PowerShell, the .NET framework, and the Microsoft Edge
JavaScript engine, to the website under open source licenses. Microsoft also partnered with Canonical to bring
Ubuntu to Windows 10.
Citing sources familiar with the matter, Bloomberg
reportsthat GitHub opted to sell to Microsoft in part because it was impressed with the performance and leadership of Microsoft's CEO Satya Nadella, who has pushed the company to embrace open source technology.
The decision has brought fear among developers and open source community, with some Twitter users proclaiming the death of GitHub and open source software, and many considering to switch to rival services such as BitBucket or GitLab.
The concern is completely rational and understandable. Despite the company's lack of a CEO and money woes, Github holds a privileged position in the software development ecosystem and plays a critical role.
GitHub is, no doubt, a hub of the open source world, with 80 million code repositories hosted on the site as of March 2018. Microsoft, on the other hand, has once opposed to such open-source software development, with its ex-CEO Steve Ballmer describing Linux as "cancer."
However, Nadella moved the company away from complete dependence on its Windows OS to more in-house development on Linux. Microsoft even brought
Linux to Windows, via the Windows Subsystem for Linux.
Microsoft's largest acquisition to date was LinkedIn, the job-oriented professional social network it
acquired in 2015 for $26 billion, and many people are now concerned that the massive investment in LinkedIn will start to pay off for Microsoft.
With both LinkedIn and GitHub, Microsoft is in a position to expand and strengthen LinkedIn. Also, the acquisition will give Microsoft access to a wealth of data and millions of software developers.
GitHub was last valued at $2 billion in 2015, though it is not yet known how much Microsoft paid for the web-hosting service.
Neither Microsoft nor GitHub has commented on the acquisition deal.
What do you think of the GitHub acquisition deal? Will you continue using it? Let us know in the comments below.
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