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The license dixondevelopment.co.uk uses grants free access to all articles and tutorials on this site in the same sense as free software is licensed freely. This principle is known as copyleft. That is to say, dixondevelopment.co.uk articles and tutorials can be copied, modified, and redistributed so long as the new version grants the same freedoms to others and acknowledges the authors of the dixondevelopment.co.uk article or tutorial used (a direct link back to this site is satisfactory). dixondevelopment.co.uk articles and tutorials therefore will remain free forever and can be used by anybody subject to certain restrictions, most of which serve to ensure that freedom. To fulfill the above goals, articles and tutorials contained on dixondevelopment.co.uk are licensed to the public under the GNU Free Documentation License. Contributors' rights and obligationsIf you contribute material to dixondevelopment.co.uk, you thereby license it to the public under the GFDL (with no invariant sections, front-cover texts, or back-cover texts). In order to contribute, you therefore must be in a position to grant this license, which means that either
In the first case, you retain copyright to your materials. You can later republish and relicense them in any way you like. However, you can never retract the GFDL license for the versions you placed here: that material will remain under GFDL forever. In the second case, if you incorporate external GFDL materials, as a requirement of the GFDL, you need to acknowledge the authorship and provide a link back to the network location of the original copy. If the original copy required invariant sections, you have to incorporate those into the dixondevelopment.co.uk article or tutorial; it is however very desirable to replace GFDL texts with invariant sections by original content without invariant sections whenever possible. Using copyrighted work from othersIf you use part of a copyrighted work under "fair use", or if you obtain special permission to use a copyrighted work from the copyright holder under the terms of our license, you must make a note of that fact (along with names and dates). It is our goal to be able to freely redistribute as much of dixondevelopment.co.uk's material as possible, so original images and sound files licensed under the GFDL or in the public domain are greatly preferred to copyrighted media files used under fair use. Never use materials that infringe the copyrights of others. This could create legal liabilities and seriously hurt the dixondevelopment.co.uk project. If in doubt, write it yourself. Note that copyright law governs the creative expression of ideas, not the ideas or information themselves. Therefore, it is perfectly legal to read an encyclopedia article or other work, reformulate it in your own words, and submit it to dixondevelopment.co.uk. Linking to copyrighted worksLinking to copyrighted works is usually not a problem, as long as you have made a reasonable effort to determine that the page in question is not violating someone else's copyright. If it is, please do not link to the page. Whether such a link is contributory infringement is currently being debated in the courts, but in any case, linking to a site that illegally distributes someone else's work sheds a bad light on us. If you find a copyright infringementIf you suspect copyright infringement, you should bring it to the attention of someone at dixondevelopment.co.uk. Others can then examine the situation and take action if needed. The most helpful piece of information you can provide is a URL or other reference to what you believe may be the source of the text. Some cases will be false alarms. For example, if the contributor was in fact the author of the text that is published elsewhere under different terms, that does not affect their right to post it here under the GFDL. Also, sometimes you will find text elsewhere on the Web that was copied from dixondevelopment.co.uk. In both of these cases, it is a good idea to make a note in the talk page to discourage such false alarms in the future. If some of the content of a page really is an infringement, then the infringing content will be removed. If the author's permission is obtained later, the text can be restored. If you are the owner of dixondevelopment.co.uk-hosted content being used without your permission, then you may request the page be immediately removed from the site. |
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Copyright Notice for John Dixon Technology Ltd |
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