We use cookies to improve your experience, deliver personalized content and ads, and analyze website performance. By clicking “Accept All”, you agree to our use of cookies as described in our Privacy Policy
“We need a fix live in two hours,” she muttered, pulling up the GitHub Marketplace. Her eyes landed on the .
The Probot Credits Shop didn’t make open source commercial. It made it . And for Elena, those 15 credits were the best investment she never knew she needed. Key Takeaway for Readers: Probot Credits are not virtual currency—they are stored developer attention . The shop lets you trade past contributions for future emergencies. Use them sparingly, but never hesitate in a crisis.
She had always ignored the Credits tab—just another gamified developer tool. But today, she clicked. In the ecosystem of GitHub automation, Probot is a framework for building apps that automate workflows: welcoming new contributors, labeling issues, running security checks, or merging pull requests. Many of these Probot-powered apps are free, but advanced features (e.g., high-speed vulnerability scanning, concurrent CI/CD runners, or priority support) require Probot Credits .
She clicked .
Elena stared at the red error log. Her team’s open-source project, “Verdant,” had just been flagged with a critical vulnerability in its authentication middleware. Fifty-seven thousand users were at risk.