I think this is a fantastic idea. One of the other open source projects where I 
contribute (github.com/rubinius) has had a similar policy in place for the last 
several years. The project literally has over 100 committers. Their idea was 
that if you create even one patch (or pull request) that is accepted, then you 
get a "commit bit" to the repository.

The fear has always been that this would lead to some maliciously committing 
bad patches or otherwise causing trouble, but those incidents have been very 
rare in practice.

So, put me down as another supporter for this idea.

On Mar 20, 2013, at 9:34 AM, Pieter Hintjens <[email protected]> wrote:

> Hi,
> 
> You might have seen Felix's "pull request hack":
> http://felixge.de/2013/03/11/the-pull-request-hack.html
> 
> We've been using something similar (C4) in libzmq and other projects
> for a while.
> 
> Do people have opinion on whether we're enjoying C4, and whether it
> would be good to add contributors to the maintainers team for any
> given project on a more aggressive basis?
> 
> E.g. once you make a patch that people like, you get commit rights
> (meaning you can merge other peoples' patches) automatically.
> 
> -Pieter
> _______________________________________________
> zeromq-dev mailing list
> [email protected]
> http://lists.zeromq.org/mailman/listinfo/zeromq-dev

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