Questions like this have always been controversial.
Some users, me included, think that questions about GitHub features - especially ones like its "advanced code review tools", which are patently programming-related - are explicitly on-topic under the clause in https://stackoverflow.com/help/on-topic permitting a question that "generally covers"...
- software tools commonly used by programmers; and is
- a practical, answerable problem that is unique to software development
It certainly seems absurd to me to close a GitHub-related question as being "about general computing hardware and software", which is what has now happened to this one.
Some other users disagree with me.
Some of them think that my side's interpretation of "tools commonly used by programmers" is overbroad - either because they think GitHub isn't programmer-specific enough, or because webapps are not properly defined as "tools".
Yet others think that, even if I'm right by the letter of the rules, questions about using closed-source web applications like GitHub, no matter how programming-related, are inherently problematic because the application may change forever, not only rendering the question obsolete but leaving behind no available version of the software anywhere in the universe to which the old question still applies. Even if they're aware that they're "creatively" interpreting the wording of the closure reasons, they'll close questions about GitHub on those grounds.
Yet others might agree with me about most questions, but argue that this particular question is a question about purchasing and licensing, rather than about using the tool, and that this fact makes it off-topic.
While I see each of those perspectives, on balance none of the above arguments persuade me. It seems to me that this is a narrow, technical, objectively answerable question about the functionality of a tool almost exclusively for use by programmers, the answer to which is of interest almost exclusively to programmers, and that for that reason it should be permitted to exist here, despite the other factors weighing against it. Presumably, 28 users who upvoted the question agreed with me. As such, I've voted to reopen it.
It's common to see these two factions clash. You will find evidence of the community's division on what to do with these questions everywhere. Jeff Atwood agreed with me in 2012, and we've got a github tag with some very highly-upvoted questions, but the Meta crowd frequently close-votes such questions when they're linked to from Meta, and the only answer I got at https://meta.stackoverflow.com/a/317602/1709587 came down on the side of declaring questions about GitHub off-topic.
As with some of our other controversies about how to moderate our content, we're probably doomed to forever fight each other over this; we have never developed the means, technical or cultural, to collectively agree on and enforce a standard when the community is fiercely split about what the standard should be. Instead, our defacto "solution" is to leave these policy questions to the judgement of each individual voter, and to occasionally fight close- and reopen-vote wars fuelled by Meta questions like this one, with the final outcome for any given controversial question ultimately depending upon which users with close vote powers happen to see it. Askers of such questions surely walk away with the (justified) impression that our moderation standards are capricious and inconsistently enforced. That sucks, but I don't know how to fix it.
What all that certainly does mean, though, is that a question like this shouldn't be an audit. Since it's now been heavily downvoted due to the Meta effect, it no longer will be, so at least that problem is solved.