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Ok, githubGitHub has thisa feature called "organizations".."Organizations". and youYou can make one now: justJust go to Profile-Dropdown > Settings > Organizations (about four from the bottom on the left).

Then on the top right will be a [New organization] button.

You just have to give it a name and youryou're good to go... youYou could try "Node.js Floundation"? :p

I've used these groups to have multiple clones of a repository under the same user name but they often also bestow commit privileges or similar.

So in the first comment SRL had been working under his Node.js org and later on his was just logged in without an org, probably working on a personal repository... what a guy :D

Ok, github has this feature called "organizations"... and you can make one now: just go to Profile-Dropdown > Settings > Organizations (about four from the bottom on the left)

Then on the top right will be a [New organization] button

You just have to give it a name and your good to go... you could try "Node.js Floundation"? :p

I've used these groups to have multiple clones of a repository under the same user name but they often also bestow commit privileges or similar

So in the first comment SRL had been working under his Node.js org and later on his was just logged in without an org, probably working on a personal repository... what a guy :D

GitHub has a feature called "Organizations". You can make one: Just go to Profile-Dropdown > Settings > Organizations (about four from the bottom on the left).

Then on the top right will be a [New organization] button.

You just have to give it a name and you're good to go. You could try "Node.js Floundation"?

I've used these groups to have multiple clones of a repository under the same user name but they often also bestow commit privileges or similar.

So in the first comment SRL had been working under his Node.js org and later on his was just logged in without an org, probably working on a personal repository.

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Ok, github has this feature called "organizations"... and you can make one now: just go to Profile-Dropdown > Settings > Organizations (about four from the bottom on the left)

Then on the top right will be a [New organization] button

You just have to give it a name and your good to go... you could try "Node.js Floundation"? :p

I've used these groups to have multiple clones of a repository under the same user name but they often also bestow commit privileges or similar

So in the first comment SRL had been working under his Node.js org and later on his was just logged in without an org, probably working on a personal repository... what a guy :D