
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA256 I just wanted to say that this whole thread is close to scaring me off *ever* putting a library on Hackage. I have worked in free software for quite some time, and let me assure you that it's not common practice elsewhere to hijack software if the maintainer does not respond for four days. Forking is OK, that's a freedom afforded to us by free software. But if Hackage ever adopts a policy in which it's OK for someone to hijack libraries if the maintainer is unable to respond in four days, I'm definitely keeping my software away from Hackage. I agree completely with Jake. This is all a big nonsense to me. As a sidenote: Just recently a maintainer of a program I'm a developer of did not respond in a couple of days. Turns out his mother had died. Imagine if he came back and had to go through a bunch of red tape to get back maintainership, because someone couldn't wait four days. How absolutely demotivating and frustrating. Then he checks his email to find a thread on the software's mailing list, with "there's no good reason why a package should remain broken for more than a day". - -- Alexander alexander@plaimi.net https://secure.plaimi.net/~alexander -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v2.0.22 (GNU/Linux) Comment: Using GnuPG with Thunderbird - http://www.enigmail.net/ iF4EAREIAAYFAlNuDe0ACgkQRtClrXBQc7X6hQD9Hwos368XOxIQVrqDINf2NuwH uWirnL5GYObPP5o1KdgA/jsGwIVXFg+ILOR8z2/EbsnWopKUq5Dr+y4IpmrOOUp5 =ZBhp -----END PGP SIGNATURE-----