OpenCourse:General disclaimer

From OpenCourse

Disclaimer

The content on this site is in the public domain.

There are no copyright restrictions for our content.

Viewing content

You may view content on OpenCourse completely for free.

There are absolutely no restrictions to viewing OpenCourse content, as it is in the public domain.

OpenCourse will never have a price - all content will always be free.

Publishing content

By publishing your content on this site, you accept that you are providing the world with a free licence to use your content in any way.

This means you lose exclusive access to your content, as it is freely available to anyone.

You can, of course, still publish this content elsewhere, even after posting to OpenCourse. For more info, see Distributing Content.

You lose the right to claim ownership of your content after publishing to our site. After publishing, your work is freely available for everyone to view, edit, copy, or redistribute.

The only restriction you encounter after publishing to this site is as follows:

You may not claim copyright or ownership over content you or others have published on OpenCourse.

By publishing here, you accept that you are giving the world free access to use your content however they please, as your work is released into the public domain.

This section also applies to editing existing articles.

Copyrighted content

All content published to OpenCourse must be your own work.

You may not upload others' work to OpenCourse, unless you own a license to redistribute one's work.

Please follow the standard copyright laws, or your content will be removed and your account may be suspended.

Distributing content

You may freely distribute content on this site.

As content is under the public domain, you can copy, publish, and sell any content based upon OpenCourse content.

If, however, your content is a 'blatant copy' of an OpenCourse lesson (i.e. your content does not add any value to the original work), please link to the articles used, if you are selling your work.

In other words, if users need to pay for your work, tell them they can get it for free if they prefer to, and link to the original article / lesson.

If you add value to the content (at least a third of your content is original), you do not have to give credit.

If you are giving the content away for free, you may copy and give away OpenCourse content without credit.

Note: Earning through non-direct methods (i.e. the user pays with adverts or data collection) counts as 'users needing to pay for your work'. In this case, you must still link the OpenCourse content if less than a third of your work is original.