I don't doubt your experience, but I wouldn't expect it to continue. I don't think Tuna-Fish is correct that "most" of the IPv4 world is behind CGNAT, but that does appear to be the trend. You can't even assume hosting providers give their subscribers their own IPv4 addresses anymore. On the other hand, there's a chance providers like Linode will eventually wise up and start giving subscribers their own /64 - there are certainly enough IPv6 addresses available for that, unlike with IPv4.
Yeah, absolutely no expectations for the future. My point was more that while there may be clear benefits for users, IPv6 presents real problems for service operators with no clear solutions in sight.
Given that GitHub also offers free services for anonymous users, I can imagine they face similar problems. The easiest move is simply to just not bother, and I can't blame them for it.
> I don't think Tuna-Fish is correct that "most" of the IPv4 world is behind CGNAT
~60%+ of internet traffic is mobile, which is ~100% behind CGNAT.
On desktop, only ~20% of US and European web traffic uses CGNAT, but in China that number is ~80%, in India ~70% and varies among African countries but is typically well over 70%, with it being essentially universal in some countries.
Overall, something a bit over 80% of all ipv4 traffic worldwide currently uses CGNAT. It's just distributed very unevenly, with US and European consumers enjoying high IP allocations for historical reasons, and the rest of the world making do with what they have.