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  ARM Give a man a fire and he's warm for a day, but set fire to him and he's warm for the rest of his life (Terry Pratchett, Jingo)

GitHub infuriates students by removing some models from free Copilot plan

(2026/03/13)


You don't get what you don't pay for! Microsoft's GitHub is dialing back on expenses by removing several costly premium models from its free GitHub Copilot Student plan.

On Wednesday, Martin Woodward, GitHub VP of developer relations, soured relations with the site's student developer community by breaking the unwelcome news.

Characterizing the plan change as an effort to make student access sustainable, Woodward said that, starting Thursday, March 12, complimentary access to Copilot will be managed under a new GitHub Student Plan alongside other GitHub Education benefits.

[1]

"As part of this transition, however, some premium models, including GPT-5.4, and Claude Opus and Sonnet models, will no longer be available for self-selection under the GitHub Copilot Student Plan," he explained in a [2]discussion forum post . "We know this will be disappointing, but we're making this change so we can keep Copilot free and accessible for millions of students around the world."

[3]

[4]

The [5]student plan still has access to many models including Claude 4.5 Haiku (normal price = Input $1 / 1M tokens; Output $5 / 1M tokens for output), Gemini 3.1 Pro (Input $2 / 1M; Output $12 / 1M), and GPT-5.3 Codex (Input $1.75 / 1M; Output $14 / 1M).

But costlier top performers like GPT 5.4 (Input $2.50 / 1M; Output $15.00 / 1M), Sonnet 4.6 (Input $3 / 1M; Output $15 / 1M), and Opus 4.6 (Input $5 / 1M; Output $25 / 1M) are no longer part of the mix.

[6]

OpenAI and Anthropic did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

[7]Users protest as Google Antigravity price floats upward

[8]NanoClaw latches onto Docker Sandboxes for safer AI agents

[9]AI Burning Man happens next week – here's what The Register expects at GTC 2026

[10]Perplexity: Everything is Computer, everything is AI, Computer is everything, AI is us

GitHub's decision has aroused ire. Woodward's post had garnered just 21 up votes compared to 2,874 down votes at the time this article was filed, as well as more than a thousand comments in the past two days.

Most of the comments express disappointment, citing the educational benefits of having access to models that perform particularly well.

A forum participant posting under the name Sahad Rushdi [11]remarked : "For many of us working on advanced engineering projects, Claude 4.6 Sonnet and Opus are not just 'options' – they are currently the most capable AI agents for coding, logic, and handling large-scale refactoring. Restricting these models from self-selection limits our ability to learn with the industry's leading technology."

That sentiment was echoed by an individual [12]posting under the name Nguyễn Thế Toàn: "[T]he removal of premium models such as GPT-5.4, Claude Opus, and Claude Sonnet makes learning programming more difficult. These models are much better at explaining complex coding concepts, helping debug problems, and guiding students step by step when we are stuck."

[13]

In response to the many calls to restore high-end model access, Woodward on Thursday offered a suggestion: Pay.

"We've now added the option so folks can upgrade from your GitHub Copilot Student plan to a paid GitHub Copilot Pro or GitHub Copilot Pro+ plan if you want to, while retaining the rest of your GitHub Student Pack benefits," he said in an update to his initial post.

That's exactly what Copilot users have been trying to avoid, and not just students. [14]Only 3.3 percent of Microsoft 365 and Office 365 customers who bother with Copilot Chat actually pay anything for the service. One of the growing concerns for Microsoft investors is whether the company's capex spending on infrastructure to support AI workloads will pay off. ®

Get our [15]Tech Resources



[1] https://pubads.g.doubleclick.net/gampad/jump?co=1&iu=/6978/reg_software/aiml&sz=300x50%7C300x100%7C300x250%7C300x251%7C300x252%7C300x600%7C300x601&tile=2&c=2abSXET7ZGB4rRhaM53vylQAAAMo&t=ct%3Dns%26unitnum%3D2%26raptor%3Dcondor%26pos%3Dtop%26test%3D0

[2] https://github.com/orgs/community/discussions/189268

[3] https://pubads.g.doubleclick.net/gampad/jump?co=1&iu=/6978/reg_software/aiml&sz=300x50%7C300x100%7C300x250%7C300x251%7C300x252%7C300x600%7C300x601&tile=4&c=44abSXET7ZGB4rRhaM53vylQAAAMo&t=ct%3Dns%26unitnum%3D4%26raptor%3Dfalcon%26pos%3Dmid%26test%3D0

[4] https://pubads.g.doubleclick.net/gampad/jump?co=1&iu=/6978/reg_software/aiml&sz=300x50%7C300x100%7C300x250%7C300x251%7C300x252%7C300x600%7C300x601&tile=3&c=33abSXET7ZGB4rRhaM53vylQAAAMo&t=ct%3Dns%26unitnum%3D3%26raptor%3Deagle%26pos%3Dmid%26test%3D0

[5] https://docs.github.com/en/copilot/get-started/plans#comparing-copilot-plans

[6] https://pubads.g.doubleclick.net/gampad/jump?co=1&iu=/6978/reg_software/aiml&sz=300x50%7C300x100%7C300x250%7C300x251%7C300x252%7C300x600%7C300x601&tile=4&c=44abSXET7ZGB4rRhaM53vylQAAAMo&t=ct%3Dns%26unitnum%3D4%26raptor%3Dfalcon%26pos%3Dmid%26test%3D0

[7] https://www.theregister.com/2026/03/12/users_protest_as_google_antigravity/

[8] https://www.theregister.com/2026/03/13/nanoclaw_latches_onto_docker_sandboxes/

[9] https://www.theregister.com/2026/03/13/nvidia_gtc_2026_preview_tobias_mann_register/

[10] https://www.theregister.com/2026/03/12/perplexity_extends_cloud_computer_to_enterprise/

[11] https://github.com/orgs/community/discussions/189268#discussioncomment-16109772

[12] https://github.com/orgs/community/discussions/189268#discussioncomment-16111109

[13] https://pubads.g.doubleclick.net/gampad/jump?co=1&iu=/6978/reg_software/aiml&sz=300x50%7C300x100%7C300x250%7C300x251%7C300x252%7C300x600%7C300x601&tile=3&c=33abSXET7ZGB4rRhaM53vylQAAAMo&t=ct%3Dns%26unitnum%3D3%26raptor%3Deagle%26pos%3Dmid%26test%3D0

[14] https://www.theregister.com/2026/02/02/microsoft_ai_spend_copilot/

[15] https://whitepapers.theregister.com/



What a cluster-fuck

ecofeco

Who coulda knowed M$ would do something like this?

/s

Re: What a cluster-fuck

Anonymous Coward

Please understand, Satya won't be able to afford his 30th superyatch.

Economics lesson for life

steviesteveo

It shows how the background costs must be killing them. With previous educational promotions you'd go to considerable effort to ensure that the kids you were hooking didn't think about costs

Re: Economics lesson for life

EricM

Agree. The cracks in the road to AI profitability are widening.

Operators still lose money with every token, even for paid transactions.

And while I agree that coding with high-end models like Opus 4.6 works quite well for limited prototypes, even these models are so far not capable of coding unsupervised, coding complex architectures or replacing human coders.

So the current level of revenue might be the ceiling that even current high-end models can generate - which is far from what would be necessary to even only sustain operating those models commercially.

Eventually, operators will stop running those models and cut their losses.

So I guess we'd better enjoy burning through available tokens, while these models are still kept running, paid for mostly by the investors.

Re: Economics lesson for life

David 132

>The cracks in the road to AI profitability are widening.

Their current high costs are a temporary aberration, due to their one-off hardware purchases.

Fortunately, GPUs and dedicated AI chips aren't subject to the constant development pressure and improvement treadmill that characterises the rest of the tech industry, so the AI players' huge investment in hardware can be amortised over many years, if not decades, and we can thus expect to see costs come down by orders of magnitude.

(...please note the icon before y'all angrily mash that downvote button in incoherent rage...)

Re: Economics lesson for life

EricM

> ..please note the icon before y'all angrily mash that downvote button in incoherent rage..

phew, read that just in time :)

On a more serious note, my irony detectors simply stopped working when it comes to AI.

There is simply no opinion stupid enough to not be put forward by sizable groups ...

Re: Economics lesson for life

DS999

Well it probably isn't cheap hosting AI to do the homework for millions of students all across the country!

Re: Economics lesson for life

Dan 55

I wonder when the adverts are going to start.

it's free until...

cschneid

...it isn't. Now that you've taught yourself that you can't live without it, you get to pay and pay and pay.

Re: it's free until...

Phil O'Sophical

Embrace, extend, extort?

Re: it's free until...

Anonymous Coward

And then you pay for it and they *still* get rid of models you relied on out of nowhere with no replacement.

Postlude

elsergiovolador

"We know this will be disappointing, but we're making this change so we can keep Copilot free shite and accessible for millions of students around the world."

FTFY

Anonymous Coward

Never forget the old adage, "there is no cloud, just someone else's computer"

Anti-Victim Device:
A small fashion accessory worn on an otherwise
conservative outfit which announces to the world that one still has a
spark of individuality burning inside: 1940s retro ties and earrings
(on men), feminist buttons, noserings (women), and the now almost
completely extinct teeny weeny "rattail" haircut (both sexes).
-- Douglas Coupland, "Generation X: Tales for an Accelerated
Culture"