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by hex12648430 3221 days ago
>The difference would probably be that while anyone can add (or update) a package to the AUR, the xbps-src maintainers have to explicitly allow this.

Nothing is preventing other users to fork or start their own void-packages repo on any git hosting service of their choice. In that sense it's actually more open to contributors than the AUR. Now the experience for the end user might not be perfect if they don't know that such a repo exists.

1 comments

But you can do the same with the standard arch repositories too. The (intended) advantage of the AUR was precisely that people don't have to create their own repositories that are hard to trust and have to be updated all the time, can fall out of maintenance, and only the original creator can access (quasi like Ubuntu PPA's - which I personally hate). That's not to say that the AUR has no downsides, but what you're describing wouldn't make it better, imo.