Hello all, This is my first time posting to this list, so bear with me for any conventions I might unwittingly ignore :) I’m the maintainer (or at least one of them) of `sx.el', a new and quickly growing StackExchange client for Emacs. (StackExchange includes all the sites similar to StackOverflow, SuperUser, ServerFault, and the host of other specialized sites such as Emacs.StackExchange.com .) I would very much like to submit this to the GNU ELPA (and have been invited to do so), but the greatest hurdle to contributing (that I’m sure I share) is the FSF copyright assignment. Let me be clear: I realize the assignment is an essential and absolutely necessary part of contributing to free software. There may or may not be discussion on this topic in and of itself — I don’t know — but the underlying concept is crucial. The foremost reservation I had/have about submitting `sx.el’ is the possibility of hindering development by virtue of the copyright assignment process. I understand that it’s not a terribly complicated process, but it is also paper-based. (Disclaimer: I’ve never seen the forms, so I don’t have the experience to base this on.) This is a terrible deterrent for contributors; it is seen as a significant time investment. I post here to bring to discussion a resource called CLAHub [1]. This service integrates with GitHub (the repository host for `sx.el’ and a host of other packages on the MELPA) to provide pull request statusing akin to Travis CI and Code Climate. With GitHub’s recent blog announcement [2], this information will be visible on the pull request’s page as the merge is discussed. Can GNU/the FSF use this resource to fulfill its copyright assignment? All the best, Sean Allred [1]: https://github.com/clahub/clahub ; https://www.clahub.com [2]: https://github.com/blog/1935-see-results-from-all-pull-request-status-checks