This makes sense,all organizations are different and it is true that all changes to the kernel tree are publicly ACK-ed before geetting committed.
Maybe we could make a note of the public key that pushed each commit to the repo so we get the best of both ways, each commit is associated to a user from it's public key, not just the Author field and tags are signed by GPG.
Maybe we could make a note of the public key that pushed each commit to the repo so we get the best of both ways, each commit is associated to a user from it's public key, not just the Author field and tags are signed by GPG.