Breaking 18:18 United States eases sanctions on Iranian oil sales following Switzerland talks 18:00 Chevron and Microsoft bet on natural gas to power artificial intelligence data centers 17:44 SpaceX turns to bond markets for first time to fund expansion and repay debt 17:10 Washington Post Reports Record Rise in Democratic Turnout in US House of Representatives Elections 16:48 Bank of America forecasts renewed Federal Reserve tightening cycle in 2026 15:22 Alan Greenspan, the “Maestro” of US monetary policy, dies at 100 14:02 Arcosa to be acquired by CRH as infrastructure consolidation accelerates 13:45 Uber-backed lime seeks Nasdaq listing in $180.9 million IPO push 13:32 Europe Would Struggle To Wage War Without US Support, Security Report Warns 13:00 US Airlines Enter Earnings Test As Geopolitical Support Fades 12:45 US and Iran reach breakthrough in Switzerland talks, Pakistan PM says 12:30 Low ESG Rating For SpaceX Sparks Debate Despite Strong Market Performance 12:15 Baker Hughes offers concessions to EU regulators over Chart Industries takeover 12:00 China Tightens Export Controls On Rare Earths Targeting US Companies Amid Rising Trade Tensions 10:16 Trump Intensifies Criticism Of Italy Over NATO And Middle East Security Role 09:40 ECB study finds limited impact of AI on US employment and wages so far 08:45 Castlelake’s £5 billion bid for EasyJet rejected despite multiple offers 08:30 Trump escalates legal battle with The New York Times over Iran coverage 07:35 South Korean ships resume passage through the Strait of Hormuz after U.S.-Iran agreement 07:09 U.S.-Iran talks continue in Switzerland despite reports of delegation dispute 07:02 Reports claim Giancarlo Esposito embraces Islam during Middle East visit

GitHub halts Copilot subscriptions as AI coding costs surge

Tuesday 21 April 2026 - 08:40
By: Dakir Madiha
GitHub halts Copilot subscriptions as AI coding costs surge

GitHub, owned by Microsoft, has frozen new subscriptions to its Copilot Pro, Pro+ and Student plans starting April 20, citing unsustainable computing demands driven by AI coding agents. The move follows internal concerns that resource consumption has outpaced the service’s pricing structure, with some individual requests now costing more to process than the monthly subscription fee paid by users.

In an official statement, product executive Joe Binder said long and parallelized AI sessions are consuming far more compute power than originally anticipated. The company introduced several immediate changes. It suspended new sign-ups across key paid tiers, imposed stricter weekly limits on sessions and tokens, and removed certain advanced AI models from lower-tier plans. Models from Anthropic, including parts of its Opus series, are being phased out for standard users, while higher-tier subscribers retain partial access for now.

The decision comes after weeks of disruption. GitHub first halted free trials on April 10 after detecting widespread abuse, then terminated all active trials three days later. Reports also pointed to a token-counting issue that underestimated actual usage, causing sudden exhaustion of limits once corrected. These issues exposed structural weaknesses in how AI usage was measured and billed under the existing subscription model.

Internal documents indicate that operating costs for Copilot have nearly doubled since January. Microsoft is now preparing a shift toward token-based billing, where users would be charged based on actual computational consumption rather than a fixed number of requests. Under the current model, Pro users receive 300 interactions per month and Pro+ users 1,500, a system increasingly misaligned with the intensity of modern AI workloads.

The timeline for this transition remains unclear, but internal planning documents describe it as a high priority as agent-based AI usage continues to expand. The shift would align pricing more closely with real usage, a model already common in cloud computing services.

Developers have reacted strongly. GitHub is offering refunds for April subscriptions to dissatisfied users who cancel before May 20, an unusual concession that signals anticipated backlash. Online developer forums have seen a surge in complaints, with users arguing that the tightened limits reduce the value of the service. In response, GitHub has introduced usage tracking tools in Visual Studio Code and its command-line interface to help developers monitor consumption and avoid hitting limits. The company described the changes as temporary while it works toward a more sustainable long-term solution.


  • Fajr
  • Sunrise
  • Dhuhr
  • Asr
  • Maghrib
  • Isha

Read more

This website, walaw.press, uses cookies to provide you with a good browsing experience and to continuously improve our services. By continuing to browse this site, you agree to the use of these cookies.