Got this email just now:<p>Free Team organizations are a legacy subscription tier that no longer exists. This tier included many of the same features, rates, and functionality as a paid Docker Team subscription.<p>After reviewing the list of accounts that are members of legacy Free Team organizations, we’ve identified yours as potentially being one of them.<p>If you own a legacy Free Team organization, access to paid features — including private repositories — will be suspended on April 14, 2023 (11:59 pm UTC). Upgrade your subscription before April 14, 2023 to continue accessing your organization.<p>If you don’t upgrade to a paid subscription, Docker will retain your organization data for 30 days, after which it will be subject to deletion. During that time, you will maintain access to any images in your public repositories, though rate limitations will apply. At any point during the 30-day period, you can restore access to your organization account if you upgrade to a paid subscription. Visit our FAQ for more information.<p>----<p>So it means that my open-source project docker images now can either be removed from docker hub, or I have to pay.<p>The cheapest option:
> Team: Billed annually starting at $300.
Their FAQ: <a href="https://web.docker.com/rs/790-SSB-375/images/privatereposfaq.pdf" rel="nofollow">https://web.docker.com/rs/790-SSB-375/images/privatereposfaq...</a>
We run a CNCF Harbor-based container registry service (<a href="https://container-registry.com/" rel="nofollow">https://container-registry.com/</a>), happy to help the project and offer a registry free of charge. Harbor has the valuable option that allows you to replicate images to other registries. So, you push images to a central place and from there they are automatically replicated to ghcr, gcr, ecr, Docker Hub and so on.<p>Happy to show and explain the various options and possibilities to the community here.
Does that mean someone else can grab your organization name that now will be freed up?<p>Feels like extortion to me, pay $300/year or we'll give your name to someone else who wants it.
I'm in the same boat. I applied for their Open Source program (<a href="https://www.docker.com/community/open-source/application/" rel="nofollow">https://www.docker.com/community/open-source/application/</a>) and am hoping this will allow me to retain my organization.<p>This really sucks for end users.
> So it means that my open-source project docker images now can either be removed from github, or I have to pay.<p>What does GitHub have to do with it? And it says “you will maintain access to any images in your public repositories”.