> On Nov 25, 2018, at 5:02 AM, George Leslie-Waksman <waks...@gmail.com> wrote:
> 
> It's probably a good idea to put something at "airflow", even if it
> just fails to install and tells people to install apache-airflow
> instead.
> 
> If not, there's a risk someone squats the name airflow and puts up
> something malicious.
> 

+ 1

> --George
> On Fri, Nov 23, 2018 at 11:44 AM Driesprong, Fokko <fo...@driesprong.frl> 
> wrote:
>> 
>> Thanks Dan for picking this up quickly.
>> 
>> Op vr 23 nov. 2018 om 18:31 schreef Kaxil Naik <kaxiln...@gmail.com>:
>> 
>>> Thanks Dan
>>> 
>>> On Fri, Nov 23, 2018 at 3:44 PM Dan Davydov <ddavy...@twitter.com.invalid>
>>> wrote:
>>> 
>>>> This could potentially break builds for some users but I feel the pros
>>>> mentioned outweigh this, I went ahead and deleted it.
>>>> 
>>>> On Fri, Nov 23, 2018 at 10:18 AM Bolke de Bruin <bdbr...@gmail.com>
>>> wrote:
>>>> 
>>>>> Agree! This is even a security issue.
>>>>> 
>>>>> Sent from my iPhone
>>>>> 
>>>>>> On 23 Nov 2018, at 15:29, Driesprong, Fokko <fo...@driesprong.frl>
>>>>> wrote:
>>>>>> 
>>>>>> Hi all,
>>>>>> 
>>>>>> I think we should remove airflow <https://pypi.org/project/airflow/>
>>>>> (not
>>>>>> apache-airflow) from Pypi. I still get questions from people who
>>>>>> accidentally install Airflow 1.8.0. I see this is maintained
>>>>>> by mistercrunch, artwr, aeon. Anyone any objections?
>>>>>> 
>>>>>> Cheers, Fokko
>>>>> 
>>>> 
>>> 
>>> 
>>> --
>>> *Kaxil Naik*
>>> *Big Data Consultant *@ *Data Reply UK*
>>> *Certified *Google Cloud Data Engineer | *Certified* Apache Spark & Neo4j
>>> Developer
>>> *Phone: *+44 (0) 74820 88992
>>> *LinkedIn*: https://www.linkedin.com/in/kaxil
>>> 

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