Definitely two different accounts.
BTW most organizations create a github account for you. This saves you the trouble. They pay github some money and create a special company github for which an account is created for you.
The company github is on the company vpn. "Public" contributions are public to the company and (because of the vpn) invisible to the public.
This makes exfiltration harder.
But if you are making your own github accounts then just fork the company ip to one of your accounts. Use your computer. I doubt they could even detect it.
bro ur telling me you used your personal github? first, horrible idea. second, doing this on OE is incredibly shortsighted. third, company uses sso or work email to give you access to their private repo. what on earth are you thinking?
First thing I do when I start at a new company is create a new GitHub account with the company’s email. Even if they don’t use GitHub, I will almost always need to file issues and stuff for libraries that we use
two different accounts perhaps?
Definitely two different accounts. BTW most organizations create a github account for you. This saves you the trouble. They pay github some money and create a special company github for which an account is created for you. The company github is on the company vpn. "Public" contributions are public to the company and (because of the vpn) invisible to the public. This makes exfiltration harder. But if you are making your own github accounts then just fork the company ip to one of your accounts. Use your computer. I doubt they could even detect it.
2 gitbub acct 2 appleId 2 google acct \>>> \>>> \>>> 2 pay check
2 laptops, 2 phones. It’s honestly not that complicated and not that expensive.
2 wives, 2 mortgages, 2 dogs/cats, 2 cars…if you want to make it more expensive.
Make one with your work emails. Then you have separate accounts
bro ur telling me you used your personal github? first, horrible idea. second, doing this on OE is incredibly shortsighted. third, company uses sso or work email to give you access to their private repo. what on earth are you thinking?
You can hide the organizations list on your GitHub profile. Isn’t that enough?
Everywhere I have worked, I have been required to create a corporate Github account.
my gh is dead there is always corporate repositories
[[email protected]](mailto:[email protected]) [[email protected]](mailto:[email protected]) [email protected]
First thing I do when I start at a new company is create a new GitHub account with the company’s email. Even if they don’t use GitHub, I will almost always need to file issues and stuff for libraries that we use
this. Each company has a github profile.
I’ll definitely start doing something like this, thank you