# Continue.dev Shuts Down: Export Your Data Before July 15

> Source: <https://byteiota.com/continue-dev-shuts-down-export-your-data-before-july-15/>
> Published: 2026-06-28 11:15:27+00:00

If you use Continue.dev, you have 17 days. Cursor acquired the open-source AI coding assistant in a quiet acqui-hire on June 16 and is shutting the product down. All user data is permanently deleted on July 15. There was no press release, no migration wizard, and no warning beyond an updated homepage FAQ. Go export your data now — the rest of this can wait.

## What Continue Was

Continue launched as the open-source answer to GitHub Copilot: bring your own API key, pick any model, keep your code on your own terms. It shipped as a VS Code extension, a JetBrains plugin, and a CLI. At the time of acquisition, it had [34,300 GitHub stars](https://github.com/continuedev/continue), roughly 8 million installs, and support for more than 30 LLM providers. For developers who wanted Copilot-style autocomplete and chat without handing their codebase to Microsoft or OpenAI, Continue was the default answer.

## The Acquisition

Cursor acquired Continue without a press release — the team updated the project homepage, and an FAQ quietly confirmed the deal. Co-founder Nate Sesti is joining Cursor. Two other founding engineers, Dallin Romney and Patrick Erichsen, chose to go to OpenClaw instead. When the people who built the tool do not follow it to the acquirer, that is a signal worth reading.

The final 2.0.0 release of the VS Code extension, CLI, and JetBrains plugin was deliberately cleaned up before handoff — telemetry removed, auth code stripped, bugs squashed. The [GitHub repository is now read-only](https://github.com/continuedev/continue). The codebase stays under Apache 2.0, which means existing forks and pinned builds remain legal to run. If your team built internal tooling on Continue’s API, fork 2.0.0 now before the institutional knowledge evaporates.

This is Cursor’s third major acquisition in 18 months: Supermaven (November 2024, for its fast tab-completion model), Graphite (December 2025, for code review), and now Continue. Combined with [SpaceX’s $60 billion acquisition of Cursor](https://byteiota.com/spacex-buys-cursor-for-60b-what-developers-need-to-know/) — and SpaceX’s February 2026 merger with xAI — every Continue install now technically belongs to Elon Musk’s conglomerate. That context matters when you pick what comes next.

## What You Need to Do Before July 15

Recurring billing has already been disabled. The product is not taking new signups. By July 15, all user account data is permanently deleted. If you have conversation history, saved configurations, or team settings stored in Continue’s cloud:

- Go to
**continue.dev** and log in - Use the export function in your account settings
- Download your data before July 15

If you only used the local extension with self-hosted or API-key models, your code never left your machine — but cloud-synced settings are at risk.

## Where to Go Next

The migration decision depends on your setup:

**VS Code, want open source:**[Cline](https://github.com/cline/cline)is the closest equivalent — 61K GitHub stars, 250+ contributors, Apache 2.0, 30+ model providers, MCP integration, and it now supports JetBrains. For a terminal-native option,[OpenCode](https://opencode.ai)has 172K stars and 7.5 million monthly active users across 75+ providers.**JetBrains:** Cline (now supported) or GitHub Copilot. Cursor is a VS Code fork and does not run inside IntelliJ or WebStorm.**Maximum capability:** Cursor is the most polished option available — though you would be using the company that just shut down your previous tool.**Want Continue’s architecture:**[PearAI](https://github.com/trypear/pearai-app)is a VS Code fork that used Continue as a submodule and is now community-maintained under Apache 2.0.

## The Bigger Pattern

Continue is not the first open-source AI coding tool to be absorbed. The market is consolidating: GitHub Copilot (Microsoft/OpenAI), Cursor (SpaceX/xAI), and Claude Code (Anthropic) now own the proprietary tier. The independent alternatives with genuine community governance — Cline and OpenCode — are the ones that have not been acquired, because there is no single founding team to buy out. That is their structural advantage.

Apache 2.0 kept Continue’s code alive after the acquisition. The license worked exactly as designed. But the product, the community, and the roadmap are gone. The lesson: pick a replacement that does not depend on a single company deciding to keep it alive.
