Could you report this to the GitHub platform? Alternatively, you could add a statement to your own (GitHub) homepage to prevent others from being scammed.
I really liked how this post digs into the accountability gap that exists in so many organizations. It’s not that people don’t care or aren’t trying — it’s that no one feels real ownership for outcomes once responsibilities get spread across layers of management. I’ve seen this happen in agile teams too: endless retros, reports, and syncs, but no one truly driving the result. What resonated most is the idea that accountability shouldn’t come from top-down pressure, but from mutual trust and clarity of purpose. When everyone knows why something matters and can see the impact of their work, accountability becomes natural instead of forced.
I’ve been following Claude’s status updates for a while, and it’s actually refreshing to see this kind of transparency. Most companies just hide issues behind vague “technical difficulties” messages, but here you can clearly track uptime and incidents. It gives a lot more confidence when using the service daily, especially since many of us depend on it for real work. Downtime is frustrating, but knowing what’s happening makes a huge difference. I wish more AI and SaaS tools had a page like this—it feels more trustworthy and professional.