@HelloZeroNet @shortcutme
The project is totally centralized on you.
If you isn't here anymore, ZeroNet will have a fork?
I recommend those maintainers:
@krixano @imachug @tangdou1
I would also recommend @MuxZeroNet, but he moved to GitLab.
Even if some of us becomes a maintainer, we should use Pull Requests, so we can directly commit to the repository, but only if that's very important -- e.g. if there's a security vulnerability. Otherwise, we should use PRs, so we and @HelloZeroNet could check each other's code.
Currently @HelloZeroNet is a user not an organization. AFAIK GitHub and GitLab have free organizations. On GitHub, you have to set your billing email, however, AFAIK they don't send anything if your plan is Free. However, the owners of the organization can change the plan, so make sure you don't give the owner role to people you don't know well (er... maybe including me).
@HelloZeroNet can rename its user name, then create a organization with same name.
@imachug While I do agree with PRs as the standard for GitHub, I wanted to mention that there are other ways of doing it, like for example branches which can be directly merged, the GitFlow method, etc. These are probably better for people who actually see each other and can more easily communicate.
@PeterSurda
Would you be a good maintainer?
@DaniellMesquita no, I don't have any particular interest in ZeroNet (or time for it). I just read about #65 in an interview, so I spent a couple of hours writing it and that's about it.
@HelloZeroNet @shortcutme
Most helpful comment
@imachug While I do agree with PRs as the standard for GitHub, I wanted to mention that there are other ways of doing it, like for example branches which can be directly merged, the GitFlow method, etc. These are probably better for people who actually see each other and can more easily communicate.