Thanks for your kind words, Hrishi!
I'm going to answer this specifically for continuing education for adults, which is where I've spent my career as an educator, and is whom freeCodeCamp is focused on helping.
Right now a lot of technology resources that used to be completely free are moving over to corporate training. This is a much more lucrative field than trying to help individual learners gain practical skills they can use to get a better job.
All of the original massive open online course programs seem to be moving in this direction.
I think that's great. Employers should invest in professional development for their employees, and these platforms are way better than what employers used to use for this purpose.
But there are also hundreds of millions of adults out there who would benefit tremendously to learn to code, and their employers aren't going to foot the bill for that.
So I see the rise of inexpensive (and in freeCodeCamp.org's case, completely free) resources that focus on helping busy people learn to code in a self-paced way.
These resources will continue to get more convenient and accessible.