Of course everyone's free to fork it, with the risk of losing a central repository where all improvements fall back.
Since your fork is up to date, you could just create a group (SSH.NET? SSHNET?), change ownership of your fork to this new group.
Then you could add a few other people to the group, including https://github.com/drieseng (the original author of this project).
We could then move the issues and create a small organisation just to keep the project alive.
Also, we probably need to create a NuGet package.
What do people think of this?
Since your fork is up to date, you could just create a group (SSH.NET? SSHNET?), change ownership of your fork to this new group.
Then you could add a few other people to the group, including https://github.com/drieseng (the original author of this project).
We could then move the issues and create a small organisation just to keep the project alive.
Also, we probably need to create a NuGet package.
What do people think of this?