Internet Archive's Terms of Use, Privacy Policy, and Copyright Policy
Terms of Use
31 Dec 2014
This terms of use agreement (the "Agreement") governs
your use of the collection of Web pages and other digital
content (the "Collections") available through
the Internet Archive (the "Archive"). When accessing
an archived page, you will be presented with the terms of
use agreement. If you do not agree to these terms, please
do not use the Archive’s Collections or its Web site
(the "Site").
Access to the Archive’s Collections is provided at no cost
to you and is granted for scholarship and research purposes
only. The Archive, at its sole discretion, may provide you
with a password to access certain Collections, provided
that you complete any required application process and provide
accurate information in your application. You may use your
password only to access the Collections in ways consistent
with this Agreement — no other access to or use of
the Site, the Collections, or the Archive's services is
authorized. You agree not to interfere with the work of
other users or Archive personnel, servers, or resources.
Further, you agree not to recirculate your password to other
people or organizations. Please report any
unauthorized use of your password promptly to
[email protected].
You acknowledge that you have read and understood the Archive’s
Privacy Policy and agree that the Archive may collect, use,
and distribute information pursuant to that policy. If you
provide any content to the Archive, you grant the Archive
a nonexclusive, royalty-free right to use that content.
Some of the content available through the Archive may be governed
by local, national, and/or international laws and regulations,
and your use of such content is solely at your own risk.
You agree to abide by all applicable laws and regulations,
including intellectual property laws, in connection with
your use of the Archive. In particular, you certify that
your use of any part of the Archive's Collections will be
limited to noninfringing or fair
use under copyright law.
If a Creative Commons or other license has been declared for
particular material on the Archive, to the extent you trust the
declaration and declarer (which is rarely the Internet Archive),
you may use the content according to the terms and conditions
of the applicable license.
In using the Archive's site, Collections,
and/or services, you further agree (a) not to violate anyone's
rights of privacy, (b) not to act in any way that might
give rise to civil or criminal liability, (c) not to use
or attempt to use another person's password, (d) not to
collect or store personal data about anyone, (e) not to
infringe any copyright, trademark, patent, or other proprietary
rights of any person, (f) not to transmit or facilitate
the transmission of unsolicited email ("spam"),
(g) not to harass, threaten, or otherwise annoy anyone,
and (h) not to act in any way that might be harmful to minors,
including, without limitation, transmitting or facilitating
the transmission of child pornography, which is prohibited
by federal law and may be reported to the authorities should
it be discovered by the Archive.
You agree that we may contact you from time to time with surveys
or other questions regarding your opinions about and uses
of the Archive, as well as with information we believe may
be of interest to you. We encourage you to respond to these
surveys because we value your input, which will assist us
in improving the Archive. In addition, we request that,
according to standard academic practice, if you use the
Archive's Collections for any research that results in an
article, a book, or other publication, you list the Archive
as a resource in your bibliography.
While we collect publicly available Internet documents, sometimes
authors and publishers express a desire for their documents
not to be included in the Collections (by tagging a file
for robot exclusion
or by contacting us or the original
crawler group). If the author or publisher of some part
of the Archive does not want his or her work in our Collections,
then we may remove that portion of the Collections without
notice.
The Archive may immediately terminate this Agreement at its
sole discretion at any time upon written notice (including
via email) to you. Upon termination, you agree that the
Archive may immediately deactivate any password it has issued
to you and bar you from accessing the Collections or the
Site.
The Archive may modify this Agreement from time to time, and
your continued use of the Collections and/or the Site constitutes
your acceptance of any and all modifications. The Archive
will attempt to notify you of substantial modifications
via the email address that you have registered with us,
if any.
Because the content of the Collections comes from around the world
and from many different sectors, the Collections may contain
information that might be deemed offensive, disturbing,
pornographic, racist, sexist, bizarre, misleading, fraudulent,
or otherwise objectionable. The Archive does not endorse
or sponsor any content in the Collections, nor does it guarantee
or warrant that the content available in the Collections
is accurate, complete, noninfringing, or legally accessible
in your jurisdiction, and you agree that you are solely
responsible for abiding by all laws and regulations that
may be applicable to the viewing of the content. In addition,
the Collections are provided to you on an as-is and as-available
basis. You agree that your use of the Site and the Collections
is at your sole risk. You understand and agree that the
Archive makes no warranty or representation regarding the
accuracy, currency, completeness, reliability, or usefulness
of the content in the Collections, that the Site or the
Collections will meet your requirements, that access to
the Collections will be uninterrupted, timely, secure, or
error free, or that defects, if any, will be corrected.
We make no warranty of any kind, either express or implied.
You agree to indemnify and hold harmless the Internet Archive
and its parents, subsidiaries, affiliates, agents, officers,
directors, and employees from and against any and all liability,
loss, claims, damages, costs, and/or actions (including
attorneys’ fees) arising from your use of the Archive’s
services, the site, or the Collections. You agree that this
Agreement is governed by California law and that any suit
arising from this Agreement will be brought in San Francisco,
California, and you further agree that on the election and
reasonable notice of either party any litigation shall be
referred to arbitration pursuant to the California Code
of Civil Procedure, §§1280 et seq. In addition,
you agree that should any provision in the Agreement be
found invalid, unlawful, or unenforceable, that provision
shall not affect the validity or enforceability of the remaining
provisions.
Under no circumstances, including, without limitation, negligence,
shall the Archive or its parents, affiliates, officers,
employees, or agents be responsible for any indirect, incidental,
special, or consequential damages arising from or in connection
with the use of or the inability to use the Site or the
Collections, or any content contained on the Site or in
the Collections, or resulting from unauthorized access to
the Collections or your transmissions of data, including,
without limitation, damages for loss of profits, use, data,
or other intangibles, even if the Archive has been advised
of the possibility of such damages. Some jurisdictions do
not allow the limitation or exclusion of liability for incidental
or consequential damages, so some of the above may not apply
to you.
This Agreement, the Privacy Policy, and other policies posted
on the Site constitute the full and complete agreement between
you and the Archive and are not intended to inure to third-party
beneficiaries.
We welcome your input. Please contact us with any comments
or questions at [email protected].
Privacy Policy
10 March 2001
The Internet Archive (the "Archive") is committed
to making its constantly growing collection of Web pages
and other forms of digital content (the "Collections")
freely available to researchers, historians, scholars, and
others ("Researchers") for purposes of benefit
to the public. The Archive offers access to some of its
Collections mainly by allowing Researchers to access its
Unix machines. This open approach is somewhat like the situation
in a public library, where staff and patrons might see who
else was in the library and a bit of what they were working
on. When Researchers using the Collections log on to the
same Unix machine using different accounts, some sharing
of information may take place. While the Archive endeavors
to enforce its Terms of Use
and maintain standard computer security, it is important
for both those who visit the site ("Visitors")
and Researchers (collectively, "Users") to be
aware of the open nature of the Archive.
The Archive may make changes to this policy from time to time
and will notify you of such changes by posting an updated
date in the Terms, Privacy, and Copyright link at the bottom
the home page of the Archive's Web site (the "Site").
Your continued use of the Site and/or the Collections constitutes
your acceptance of any changes to the Privacy Policy concerning,
but not limited to, both previously and prospectively collected
information.
What Personal Information May the Archive Have on Its Computers
and Systems?
Because the Archive uses standard Web logging in its Web
servers, our Web server may automatically recognize the
domain name of each Visitor, each Visitor’s IP address,
what Web page the Visitor requests, and the time of the
request, along with a variety of information supplied by
the visitor’s browser. See www.microsoft.com and www.netscape.com
for information about the Microsoft Internet Explorer and
Netscape Navigator browsers, and see www.apache.org for
details about Web logs.
In addition, the Archive may collect the email addresses and
messages of those who communicate with it via email or who
enter email addresses in forms.
The Archive may collect personally identifying information when
a Researcher registers for access to the Collections, including
the Researcher’s name, address, telephone number,
and email address, and the Researcher’s proposal for
using the Collections.
The Archive may use "cookies" to track Users' activities
on the Site and in the Collections. Cookies are small files
that a server transfers to the hard drive of someone who
visits a site and that the server can access when the person
returns to the site.
The primary sources of content for the Collections are publicly
accessible Web pages that were collected and donated by
third parties, but the Archive will expand on such sources
through its own collection activities. For instructions
on removing a particular set of pages currently included
in the Collections, please see our policies and procedures
for page removal.
The
communications between you and the Archive may pass through
many machines, operating systems, programs, browsers, Web
servers, networks, routers, Ethernet switches, Internet
service providers, proxy servers, intranets, the public
phone system, or other devices (collectively, "Devices")
on your premises, at the Archive, and in between. Some of
these Devices create logs of activities that are recorded
on computer systems.
What Might the Internet Archive Do With the Information on Its
Computers?
The Archive has no present intention to charge for access
to the Collections. The Archive may transfer the information
on its machines, including personally identifying information,
into the Collections. The Collections are made available
to researchers and may be made available on the Site, or
provided to third parties, for any use, without limitation.
For instance, parts of the Collections are now in the collections
of the Library of Congress and the Smithsonian Institution.
Advances in data mining technology may make it possible to discover
more personally identifiable information or profiles in
the Collections.
The Archive may disclose any information it collects from Users
if the Archive believes in good faith that such action is
reasonably necessary to enforce its Terms of Use or other
policies, to comply with the law, to comply with legal process,
to operate its systems properly, or to protect the rights
or property of itself, its Users, or others.
It is possible that the computers at the Archive could become
compromised by others and that the information on the Archive’s
computers could be collected and disseminated without the
knowledge or consent of the Archive. While the Archive endeavors
to block "crackers" from breaking into its machines,
the Archive is not responsible or liable for any such unauthorized
uses of the Archive or its data.
How to Update Researcher Registration Information
Researchers can help the Archive maintain the accuracy of
their information by notifying the Archive of any changes
in their address, title, phone number, or email address.
Contact the Archive by email at
[email protected]
to see, update, or delete your information.
Copyright Policy
10 March 2001
The Internet Archive respects the intellectual property rights
and other proprietary rights of others. The Internet Archive
may, in appropriate circumstances and at its discretion,
remove certain content or disable access to content that
appears to infringe the copyright or other intellectual
property rights of others. If you believe that your copyright
has been violated by material available through the Internet
Archive, please provide the Internet Archive Copyright Agent
with the following information:
Identification of the copyrighted work that you claim has been infringed;
An exact description of where the material about which you
complain is located within the Internet Archive collections;
Your address, telephone number, and email address;
A statement by you that you have a good-faith belief that
the disputed use is not authorized by the copyright owner,
its agent, or the law;
A statement by you, made under penalty of perjury, that
the above information in your notice is accurate and that
you are the owner of the copyright interest involved or
are authorized to act on behalf of that owner; and
Your electronic or physical signature.
The Internet Archive Copyright Agent can be reached as follows:
Internet Archive Copyright Agent
Internet Archive
300 Funston Ave.
San Francisco, CA 94118
Phone: 415-561-6767
Email: [email protected]
For More Information
If you have any questions or comments regarding these terms
and policies or the Archive’s data collection practices,
please contact the Archive at
[email protected]
or Internet Archive, 300 Funston Ave., San Francisco, CA 94118,
phone 415-561-6767.