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One of the main reasons for this kind of requirement is to ensure that the project stays in legal compliance, and that the provided code is in fact licenseable. Without a record of the real copyright holder of any given part of the codebase, it is far more difficult know if the code provided is tainted (think vendor employee stealing code and submitting it for includsion).
Not knowing who contributed code also makes license enforcement problematic, as it could be argued there is no known copyright holder. This opens a whole new can of worms, as without the release of copyright from the real holder the work defaults to All Rights Reserved status under at least US law and I think the Berne convention as well.
On 03/05/2018 03:13 PM, Taiidan@gmx.com wrote:
I can't understand as to why doing a git commit requires your "real" name and while I could simply make something up I instead I wish to protest this policy and hear out a justification for it.
This is a project with a main goal of improving security however having your name on the internet is almost always going to be bad security.
- -- Timothy Pearson Raptor Engineering +1 (415) 727-8645 (direct line) +1 (512) 690-0200 (switchboard) https://www.raptorengineering.com