- Thomas Dohmke resign as CEO of Github, effective at the end of 2025
- Github is approaching Microsoft, since it aligns with Koreai Business
- Microsoft’s CEO says that “internal organizational limits make sense” anyway
The Github CEO, Thomas Dohmke, has announced that he will resign as CEO of the company when Microsoft begins to bring Github closer to its Koreai team.
After the move, Microsoft will not appoint a new Github CEO and the company will no longer have a single leader, but informs more directly to its Koreai division.
After a period of four years, Dohmke will continue to serve as CEO until the end of 2025, however, he alluded to plans to find a new startup.
CEO of github resign, there is no new CEO in sight
Koreai, led by former goal Exec Jay Parikh, is the new Microsoft division to build AI platforms and tools.
“Github and his leadership team will continue their mission as part of Microsoft’s Koreai organization,” Dahmke wrote.
The CEO that came out also pointed out “pride for everything we have built as a remote organization”: it was recently revealed that Microsoft could be looking to increase their business days in the office, and it is not clear if Dohmke’s comment is a secret excavation in this.
With Github to be more closely aligned with Microsoft Koreai, we could speculate that the workers of the developer platform could be affected by any next change.
Speaking about the Github scale, Dohmke mentioned that the platform now houses more than one billion restors and forks, more than 150 million developers and, more recently, more than 20 million co -pilot users.
“By launching this new era of developers, we have made anyone possible, regardless of the language they speak at home or how fluids are in programming, to take their spark of creativity and transform it into something real,” he added.
When Satya Nadella launched at Koreai, he explained that, in addition to gathering “Dev div, AI platform and some key teams of the CTO office (AI Supercomputer, Ai Agentic Runtimes and engineering prosper),” also “would develop the github co -pilot”, an early track that the popular developer platform would be losing part of their independence.
Nadella also pointed out: “We must remember that our internal organizational limits make sense both for our clients and for our competitors.”