I have a question about linking to my repository in my answers.
Here's a situation. I'm top 2 answerer in the Laravel
tag and top 1 in terms of number of answers. I'm saying this to show that I care about helping people and that was the main reason to create the repo I'll be talking about.
I see that the most of Laravel developers are struggling because of the absence of any source for the best practices for Laravel apps like comminity conventions, putting JS into PHP templates etc. So I've decided to create one a few months ago.
Now, sometimes in my answers I'm giving a link to the repository. But a moderator changed all those links by adding a disclaimer to my answers that the repo belongs to me and asked me to do the same.
But the problem is I'm feeling like a cheap door to door salesman who sells crap when I'm adding a link with a disclaimer like that. I would be happy to place a link to another source of Laravel best practices, but there is no such source (this one is framework agnostic, nothing about Laravel there. Even their disclaimer says about that).
Of course, I want to popularize the repo, but I definitely do not want to sell it like a tricky salesman.
Also, I'm not hiding the fact I'm the owner because my nickname of SO and in the repo is the same (which is my real name).
So, my question is: is it possible to not add this ugly disclaimer to every link in this circumstances? I mean when there is only one source for this kind of information and adding these disclaimers just because the source if yours is awful in my opinion. I'd rather to not put these links at all even it will be super helpful for a new Laravel guy.
Or maybe there is a way to tell people it's my repo without a disclaimer? For example, is it ok if the link would be a simple HTTP link where everybody can see my name without even clicking it:
https://github.com/alexeymezenin/laravel-best-practices
Update
The most of the guys missed the point of the question. The thing is this repo is the only source for the info and it was created to help SO users. So, I literally can't post a link to any other source.
Before this, I had no problems because of posting the link to the repo except downvotes from that one guy. And like 10 random guys said me in the comments the repo is great, so people like the repo itself.
But now, when I'm using phrases like "Learn more about Laravel naming conventions in my best practices repo", my answers get downvotes. So, I think now people think I'm just trying to sell my repo.
For more information about naming conventions, see [this article](https://github.com/alexeymezenin/laravel-best-practices#follow-laravel-naming-conventions) on my best practices site.
would suffice. As long as it's supporting, rather than providing, the answer and you're explicit about your relationship with the material, that's fine. You don't have to actually use the word "disclaimer" or use special formatting or anything.Disclaimer: this repository belongs to me
I thought it should look like that. But John's disclaimer looks great and I've already changed the link title in the answer and going to use it in the future if it's really not against the rules.