I think that at minimum even an automated email with
"Hey the package you maintained on AUR is now in extra/blah, your
repository or parts of it may or may not have been used, thank you for
your contributions!"
sent to the Maintainer and Co-Maintainers of the package at the time
would go a long way and would have zero controversy.

Some of my things were adapted and I was confused and had to spend
time figuring out what happened that could have been used elsewhere.

Martin

On Tue, Oct 22, 2024 at 11:45 AM Shawn Michaels <shawn_micha...@gmx.ch> wrote:
>
>
>
> On October 22, 2024 10:34:58 AM GMT+02:00, Ralf Mardorf 
> <ralf-mard...@riseup.net> wrote:
> >On Tue, 2024-10-22 at 12:02 +0800, Ling Yang(杨令) wrote:
> >> However, with his AUR repository being disabled, there is no way for
> >> people to learn about his work, and it seems as though his
> >> contributions to the Arch community have never existed.
> >
> >Hi,
> >
> >far too much importance is attached to this point. For example, take a
> >look at an important official package. Although the names of the
> >contributors and maintainers should be familiar to anyone who has been
> >using Arch Linux for a long time, hardly anyone will have taken a look
> >at the PKGBUILD.
> >
> >Regards,
> >Ralf
>
> Employers do like to see open source contributions and I could see it being 
> useful when applying for a position.

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