A few weeks ago, Github decided to disable all Github Actions (including self-hosted runners) access for our open source org (lightningdevkit) for some unknown reason. As some of us happen to work for a company with a large Github corporate account (Block), we tried to escalate through our corporate reps, who informed us that the issue appeared to be some drive-by contributors who weren t org members being flagged for using Actions to do crypto-mining. As the org isn t technically in our corporate account, we then had to wait a few weeks to get a response back on getting unbanned...only to be told that we appeared to have been taking part in activity which goes against Github s ToS. They then listed some examples of ToS-violating activities, none of which we ve done, and the org itself obviously wasn t running any kind of mining in CI.As we d already had plenty of reasons to move off of GitHub (downtime, a website that has gotten consistently slower due to massive increases in client-side JS without new features over the past decade, PRs that won t load once they get past 50 comments, contributors getting banned (without crypt-mining) leading to potentially-useful PRs getting black-holed, slow support, etc, etc), this is more of a warning for others than any kind of attempt to get help.Of course Github is struggling these days with an influx in AI Agent accounts driving a huge increase in spam and other garbage, so I sympathize a lot with the folks over there. But none of that means we have to use the (historically excellent) free product they re offering, we can also...not.For those who weren t aware, codeberg/self-hosted forgejo can import entire github repos including historical issues and PRs, comments, etc.