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  1. stackoverflow.com

    Every change in GIT (and in the most of modern VCS's) has an author and a committer. The Log shows an author because we respect authorship even if the author of changes doesn't have access to the repo or isn't able to commit code by himself.
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  3. stackoverflow.com

    The documentation says: Annotations for lines modified in the current revision, are marked with bold type and an asterisk. But I think it is important to clarify that this refers to lines modified in the current revision of the file, not the current revision of the repository.. I think a clearer way to phrase this would be:
  4. infosecurity-magazine.com

    Oh, Yes We Should. While speaking with three other information security executives on the keynote panel of a pre-pandemic ISACA conference, I mentioned that users have to be held responsible for clear policy violations.
  5. Mar 26, 2004A version of this article appears in print on , Section A, Page 18 of the National edition with the headline: The 9/11 Hearing: The Blame and the Apology. Order Reprints | Today's Paper | Subscribe
  6. docs.asterisk.org

    Linux Support Services¶. Way, way back in 1999 a young man named Mark Spencer was finishing his Computer Engineering degree at Auburn University when he hit on an interesting business concept. 1999 was the high point in the .com revolution (aka bubble), and thousands of businesses world-wide were discovering that they could save money by using the open source Linux operating system in place ...
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  1. Every change in GIT (and in the most of modern VCS's) has an author and a committer. The Log shows an author because we respect authorship even if the author of changes doesn't have access to the repo or isn't able to commit code by himself.

    Asterisk on the author's name in the Log means that this commit was created by the described person, but was applied by someone else.

    Here is an illustration of how it looks:

    There are some common cases when this happens:

    • you cherrypicked someone else's commit
    • you rebased branch with someone else's commits
    • you applied .patch file mailed to you by someone else
    • you merged the pull-request via GitHub UI - GitHub does it with its own user but leaves authorship to you.

    --Denys Kurochkin

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