Diversity, inclusion, and belonging at GitHub in 2019
We’re proud to share the progress we’ve made over the past year and the work we’re doing to grow our diverse workforce.

We’re proud to share the progress we’ve made over the past year and the work we’re doing to grow our diverse workforce.
To celebrate 365 days of achievements, let’s look back at the code and communities built on GitHub this year.
Find out what we learned from nearly 16,000 students and 100 teachers who joined the GitHub Education program from 2014-2015.
Our help documentation, covering topics on GitHub.com, GitHub Enterprise, GitHub Desktop, and GitHub Pages is now available in Brazilian Portuguese.
We’re announcing the CodeSearchNet Challenge and releasing a large dataset for natural language processing and machine learning.
Our help documentation, covering topics from GitHub.com, GitHub Enterprise, GitHub Desktop, and GitHub Pages is now available in Spanish.
Check out our GitHub Internship series brought to you by our 2019 summer interns. In this post, learn about Alejandra Trejo Rodriguez, a student who led the initiative to localize courses in GitHub Learning Lab.
Our biggest community event is back—and better than ever. Join us on November 13-14 at the Palace of Fine Arts with brand new speakers, swag, and so much more.
We’re sharing interviews from several open source contributors about their projects, challenges, and what a GitHub sponsorship means to them. This week, hear from Chrissy LeMaire.
Liran Tal, Developer Advocate at Snyk, shared a few key takeaways and advice from their 2019 Open Source Security Report.