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Currently, the only way to adjust the data shared with the public is to use the all-or-nothing setting that you described. However, there are a few workarounds that you can use to achieve a finer degree of control. For example, you could create a separate GitHub account for your personal projects and use a different account for your professional projects. You could also use a third-party service to hide your followers and starred repositories from your public profile. There is a feature request on GitHub's discussion forum for more fine-grained control over what information is shared on public profiles. The feature request has received a lot of support from users, so it is possible that GitHub will implement this feature in the future. |
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You can make individual repositories public or private. If you have repositories that you want to keep private, mark them as private in your repository settings. You can choose which repositories are visible on your profile. |
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I think it makes total sense. Particularly with followers/following list, as it can easily indirectly reveal information about who you know personally or where you work/live, even if you didn't directly provide this in your profile. So I can see why one would want to hide that but keep all the other public profile features turned on, like the contribution graph for example. |
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Right now, we are only given a binary decision on what we share on Github. Would it be possible to have some more fine control over what we share like being able to show a public profile but hide followers and starred repositories? As far as I understand, there is not an option to adjust the data shared with the public except for the option below which is all or nothing.
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