Updated with what I could scrape.

gbeekmans = Gerard Beekmans <[email protected]>
georgeb =  George Boudreau <georgeb>
jhuntwork = Jeremy Huntwork <[email protected]>
manuel = Manuel Canales Esparcia <manuel>
matthew = matthew <matthew>
pierre = Pierre Labastie <[email protected]>
thomasp = Thomas Pegg <thomasp>

On Wed, Apr 17, 2019 at 9:34 PM Bryan Gonzalez <[email protected]> wrote:

> As the repo stands currently, there are 7 lifetime contributors. Github
> recommends that all contributors have valid email addresses. I only know of
> Pierre's and Jeremy's. Do you know the others?
> (These should correspond to one of the email addresses you use on github
> (you can have multiple, fyi))
>
> gbeekmans = gbeekmans <gbeekmans>
> georgeb = georgeb <georgeb>
> jhuntwork = Jeremy Huntwork <[email protected]>
> manuel = manuel <manuel>
> matthew = matthew <matthew>
> pierre = Pierre Labastie <[email protected]>
> thomasp = thomasp <thomasp>
>
> On Wed, Apr 17, 2019 at 6:15 PM Bryan Gonzalez <[email protected]>
> wrote:
>
>> Also: GitHub has has a tool now to try and handle it automatically ->
>> https://help.github.com/en/articles/about-github-importer
>>
>> Offer still stands if you'd like me to do it manually too.
>>
>> Very much motivated to move to GitHub. (If you couldn't tell)
>>
>> On Wed, Apr 17, 2019 at 5:18 PM Jeremy Huntwork <
>> [email protected]> wrote:
>>
>>> On Wed, Apr 17, 2019 at 1:22 PM Jeremy Huntwork
>>> <[email protected]> wrote:
>>> >
>>> >
>>> > We could see what Gerard has to say, but I’m pretty confident I’m the
>>> copyright holder. I committed the version of the license file that still
>>> appears next to the code as well as the first versions of jhalfs itself.
>>> >
>>> > If we moved it, I would think we could just point the web pages to the
>>> new location and not worry too much about synchronization.
>>> >
>>> > Anyway, I’m not currently the maintainer so it’s totally up to you.
>>>
>>>
>>> Looking a little closer, it looks like contributors to a GPL-based
>>> project maintain copyright on their own contributions. That being
>>> said, the whole point of a license like that is to allow free use and
>>> duplication, provided the license stays with the work. To change the
>>> license, we would need to have permission from contributors whose code
>>> remains, but there's nothing that prevents us from hosting it
>>> somewhere else and even modifying it.
>>>
>>> JH
>>> --
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>>
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