Creative Commons. Do you want your publications to be made public with a Creative Commons license when the journal or publisher allows this? Yes No
Creative Commons. These terms of service are based on terms developed by Automattic with amendments by Dreamwidth and subsequently Growstuff and is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution- ShareAlike 2.5 License. Open Food Network Australia is a community by and for food buyers/sellers. Together, we are building a website where we can share our experience and knowledge. For Open Food Network to thrive, we need people to share their knowledge, experience and needs, and help build the site itself. Whatever your interest in Open Food Network you are welcome here, and will be treated with respect. In particular: - We welcome people of any age, gender identity or expression, ethnicity, nationality, religion or absence thereof, political opinion, sexual orientation, marital status, family structure, ability or disability, appearance, subculture, or other identity or self-identification. - We welcome people of all skill and experience levels, and we don't believe in being dismissive or commenting rudely just because you are new or learning. - Every role in our community is important, including food producers and traders who contribute skills, knowledge, and information to our site; coders, designers and other techies who help build it; moderators and others who help our community thrive; or any other form of participation. We believe in working together, and prioritise communication and mutual understanding. If you want to participate in the Open Food Network community (which includes our website and any auxiliary forums such as our mailing list(s) etc), you need to agree to our general commitment to inclusiveness and mutual respect, as well as to the following specific policies: - Harassment of any Open Food Network community member is forbidden. Harassment includes slurs directed at individuals or groups; unwanted sexual remarks directed at any person or group; sexually explicit comments or imagery in public spaces; stalking or other repeated, unwanted contact; or any repeated or sustained behaviour which disrupts someone else's enjoyment of the Open Food Network site or community. - The privacy of our community members is very important. You may not disclose any member's personal details (including names by which they are known outside of Open Food Network, their location, employment details, family details, outside-of-Open Food Network contact details, or any other identifying or personal information) without their explicit consent. - Although we let you choose your own ...
Creative Commons. You may want to apply a Creative Commons license to your thesis, which requires attribution of your work by others, but can also allow others to share, reuse or make derivatives, depending on your wishes. For more information see: xxxx://xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx.xxx/licenses/ Your department may require that your thesis includes a signature page with the original signatures of your committee members. If so, this signature page needs to be included in the electronic copy of your thesis uploaded to Digital Commons. If you prepare print copies of your thesis for yourself and/or your department, you should provide a signature page with original signatures for each print copy. For print copies, signature pages should: be on the same cotton bond paper as the remainder of your thesis; be double-spaced; and follow the prescribed margins (see Page 8). Your advisor should sign the top line. Include the title of your thesis and your full name on the signature page. Refer to Figure 3 as an example. APPROVED BY: * Advisor Date Reader Date Reader Date Chair, Thesis Committee Date
Creative Commons. Photos of SPEAK pop-up events must be released under a Creative Commons license ("Attribution - NonCommercial - NonDerivative"), so they can be freely shared and reposted.
Creative Commons. Attribution, Xxxxx Xxxxx (BY-SA)
Creative Commons. This Terms of Service document is based on one developed by Automattic (xxxx://xxxxxxxxx.xxx/tos/) with amendments by Dreamwidth (xxxx://xxx.xxxxxxxxxx.xxx/legal/tos) and subsequently Growstuff (xxxx://xxx.xxxxxxxxx.xxx/policy/tos) and is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution- ShareAlike 2.5
Creative Commons. You may want to apply a Creative Commons license to your thesis, which requires attribution of your work by others, but can also allow others to share, reuse or make derivatives, depending on your wishes. For more information see: xxxx://xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx.xxx/licenses/ Figure 2 OPTIONAL Sample Copyright Page Example of Copyright statement: Copyright by Full name of author Year Example of Creative Commons License: This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution- NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License. Your department may require that your thesis includes a signature page with the original signatures of your committee members. If so, this signature page needs to be included in the electronic copy of your thesis uploaded to Digital Commons. If you prepare print copies of your thesis for yourself and/or your department, you should provide a signature page with original signatures for each print copy. For print copies, signature pages should: be on the same cotton bond paper as the remainder of your thesis; be double-spaced; and follow the prescribed margins (see Page 8). Your advisor should sign the top line. Include the title of your thesis and your full name on the signature page. Refer to Figure 3 as an example. Figure 3 Sample Signature Page Full title of thesis by Author’s full name (centered and double-spaced) APPROVED BY: * ________________________ ______ Advisor Date _______________________ ______ Reader Date _______________________ ______ Reader Date _______________________ ______ Chair, Thesis Committee Date
Creative Commons. With a Creative Commons license, an author can give others permission to distribute or share his/her work and with some types of license even to modify it. For any license, attribution (i.e. acknowledging the author) is a prerequisite. The author always retains the full copyright. Lecturers use all kinds of media and platforms to make material available to students. The copyright conditions may vary per medium/platform, but as soon as you share any material, whether on the internet, intranet, a DLWO with restricted access or via social media or email, the copyright law applies. Below we briefly comment on the different media/platforms. When distributing material by means of a reader, the AUAS Reader procedure holds. This has been drawn up in consultation with Stichting PRO and lists what is and what isn’t allowed when making a reader. If you have any questions about the Reader procedure, please contact the reader coordinator of your faculty. It is a misunderstanding that when distributing material on a DLWO / intranet with restricted access (login required) the Copyright Law is no longer valid. Even when putting material on a DLWO or an intranet, there are certain conditions. AUAS will face high fines if these conditions are not complied with. Make sure to: Use the DLWOs / intranet for short passages only (See Conditions of Stichting PRO) or link to material in a lawful source, for example to the Library databases or obtain permission for longer passages beforehand from Stichting PRO.
Creative Commons. Retrieved April 8, 2009, from xxxx://xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx.xxx/licenses/by/2.0/. Xxxxxx, X. (1996) Mass media and democracy revised. Mass Media and Society pp. 81-119. Xxxxxx Press, London. Xxxxx, X. (2007) Media work Polity Press, Cambridge, UK. Xxxxxx, X. (2006) Limits of self–organization: peer production and ‘laws of quality.’ First Monday, 11 (10). Xxxxxxx, X. X. (1966) Toward a general theory of the First Amendment Random House, New York. Xxxxxx, X. (2002) The law of copyright and the Internet Oxford University Press. Xxxxxx, X. X. (2004) Promises to keep: technology, law, and the future of entertainment Stanford University Press, Stanford, CA. Xxxx, X. (1996) The irony of free speech Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA. Xxxxxxxxx, X. (2007) Wired shut: Copyright and the shape of digital culture MIT Press, Cambridge, MA.
Creative Commons. Presenter agrees Presentation may be distributed under a “Creative Commons” license, which allows intellectual property to be re-published in non-derivative works, as long as appropriate credit is given and the Presentation is not distorted. By signing this Agreement, Presenter acknowledges and agrees to not object to the distribution of the Presentation by Xxxxxxxx under any Creative Commons license.