You should now specify whether your project is already part of the GNU project or not. A program is considered part of the GNU project only if it has been approved by the coordinator of the GNU project (Richard M. Stallman). That approval is accompanied by an e-mail message stating that you have become an official GNU maintainer.

The source repository and web pages for a GNU package are not hosted in Savannah but in ftp.gnu.org and www.gnu.org. However, the webpages CVS repository is in Savannah (administrators of GNU projects can also choose to use other FTP and HTTP servers outside the gnu.org domain).

Developers of GNU packages must agree to some rules and coding standards. If you are considering to request the GNU project to include your software, read carefully Information for Maintainers of GNU Software and the GNU Coding Standards.

If you want your package to become part of the GNU project, this is a separate process. You do not need a Savannah account for this. You need to contact the GNU Evaluation team; for this please check http://www.gnu.org/help/evaluation.html . If you want a Savannah account before to get part of the GNU project, then select the non-GNU project type instead. If your project gets approved by GNU, we will later move it to the GNU area.

Assigning copyright of your program to the FSF is a separated issue; it does not make your program automatically part of the GNU project. And GNU maintainers are not obliged to assign copyright of their programs to the FSF either. Transferring copyright to the FSF serves a legal purpose: to allow the FSF to defend you in court should someone violate your program's license. Assigning copyright to the FSF requires signing a copyright transfer form that can be obtained from the FSF.