The development community saw this one coming: GitHub will transition its Copilot service to a usage-based billing model on June 1, replacing its existing system of fixed subscriptions supplemented by premium request limits. As reported last week, GitHub suspended new sign-ups for several of its Copilot subscription tiers as it faced a surge in demand from agentic coding workflows. To address that, under GitHub’s new pricing model, customers across individual, business, and enterprise tiers will receive a monthly allocation of AI credits, which are consumed based on token usage. This includes input, output, and cached data processed by underlying models. Once those credits are exhausted, users can purchase additional capacity at published rates. The change leaves base subscription prices intact. Individual plans remain priced at $10 per month for Pro and $39 for Pro+, while business and enterprise tiers continue at $19 and $39 per user per month, respectively. Each plan’s monthly ...
The Model Context Protocol (MCP) is moving faster than the developer community can keep up with, racing past its original design parameters and leaving teams scrambling to build clients that can match its pace. The result is an ecosystem where the protocol itself keeps shifting under everyone’s feet, and where the tooling, conventions and security thinking that should accompany a foundational standard are still being figured out on the fly. Joey Stout, solutions architect at Spacelift, joins Mike Vizard to make the case that this is the price of being early. Stout describes an environment that increasingly resembles a Wild West, where rogue MCP servers get spun up inside organizations without anyone in leadership knowing they exist, let alone whether they have basic guardrails wrapped around them. The convenience of standing one up in a few minutes has outrun the discipline needed to govern them. MCP servers can give AI agents broad reach into internal systems, data and APIs, an...