Okay, I suppose my explanation lacked some important details.
The thing is, I am not the owner of the project. The owner simply invited me
to join but later on I decided it would be more convenient for me to
participate using an another account.

To my surprise there was no way for a regular contributor to end one's
membership (except telling the owner to do that).

That kind of made me scratch my head. I mean, why should ending my own
membership be subject to access control? Isn't it overly restrictive?

rgds,
dd


On Tue, Aug 4, 2009 at 9:49 PM, David Anderson <[email protected]> wrote:

>
> On Tue, Aug 4, 2009 at 20:45, D D<[email protected]> wrote:
> > Um.. is the management logic of "people/list" @ Hosted Projects some
> > kind of a taboo topic?
>
> No, I just missed your email.
>
> If you are the last owner of a project, you cannot remove yourself, as
> we don't want orphan projects.
>
> If you want to use a different account, simply add that account to the
> owners list, switch to the new account, and with the owner rights you
> just granted to it, delete the old username.
>
> Does that make sense?
>
> - Dave
>
> >
> > rgds,
> > dd
> >
> > On Aug 3, 11:16 pm, D D <[email protected]> wrote:
> >> Hi.
> >>
> >> I joined a project but later on decided to use a different account. To
> >> my surprise, there was no way for me to renounce an aquired membership
> >> in a Hosted Project. Why?
> > >
> >
>
> >
>

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