On August 16, 2014 at 5:35:29 AM, Matt DeBoard (matt.deboard@gmail.com) wrote: Sorry for the thread necromancy. What do I need to do for inclusion in GNU ELPA? You need to get everyone with non-trivial contributions to the project to sign the FSF copyright assignment document. You’ll also have to stop accepting non-trivial contributions from people who haven’t signed the document. The latter is my primary problem with having a package go to ELPA as you’re losing a lot of useful contributions from GitHub, as most folks are unlikely to want to deal with a paper document, which is unfortunate.  On Thu, Jul 10, 2014 at 12:00 PM, chad  wrote: On 09 Jul 2014, at 20:59, Matt DeBoard wrote: > As regarding inclusion in GNU ELPA, I'm just a caretaker for the > project on behalf of the Elixir-lang people, but as it's already in > MELPA I'm sure it's fine. I would go a step further than Stefan and say that MELPA is basically the archetype of not-fine in this domain: finding a package in MELPA means, basically "someone, somewhere, wrote some code that might do something, in some of the versions I've had at some point". Finding a package in GNU ELPA (or a handful of other elpa repositories) adds things like "this version should actually do what's written on the tin" to potentially-interesting properties like "copyrights already assigned" and "can be fixed by interested emacs maintainers". I hope that helps, ~Chad