A public Github repo existing makes absolutely no guarantee that the code and configuration in the repo is what the owner of the repo uses in production.
And of course they only have one commit. There's no history of how we got here. We don't get to see what happened with the South Africa prompt additions.
Additionally, no new commits have been made since the initial commit. Maybe they haven't made any changes whatsoever in the 5 days since, but the longer that goes on, the less believable it is that this is at all reflecting what they're actually using.
A public Github repo existing makes absolutely no guarantee that the code and configuration in the repo is what the owner of the repo uses in production.
And of course they only have one commit. There's no history of how we got here. We don't get to see what happened with the South Africa prompt additions.
Additionally, no new commits have been made since the initial commit. Maybe they haven't made any changes whatsoever in the 5 days since, but the longer that goes on, the less believable it is that this is at all reflecting what they're actually using.