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Acceptable Use
Policy |
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Subscribers to the services
of Reveille Corporation are required to abide by the following
Acceptable Use Policy (AUP).
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Email and mailing lists:
- Sending unsolicited
e-mail, particularly commercial e-mail and bulk e-mail (addressed
to multiple recipients) is prohibited. Automatic generation of
mailing lists, or other inclusion of subscriber e-mail addresses
in mailing lists without request or advance approval by the
subscriber is prohibited. Mailing lists must be professionally
administered and provide a reasonably responsive unsubscribe
option, backed up (if automatic) by a reasonably responsive human
list administrator. Forging of mail headers or otherwise obscuring
or misrepresenting the origin of a message, either manually or via
a mailer program, is prohibited. Reveille reserves the right to
block e-mail and other network traffic which originates from sites
that habitually send or have recently sent unsolicited e-mail, or
which permit e-mail to be relayed through them.
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World Wide Web:
- Reveille Corporation
reserves the right to refuse to provide World Wide Web publishing
services using our servers and computers in cases where the
content involved is judged to be salacious, explicitly erotic, or
offensive. Customers purchasing transit services but not Web
publishing services from Reveille may establish whatever standards
they feel are appropriate. Other prohibited content includes any
illegal content as well as any content that supports or advocates
violations of any clause of the AUP.
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Copy Right Infringement:
- The Digital Millennium Copyright
Act was signed into law in 1998.) to protect these
intermediary parties from copyright infringement when performing
common Web activities. However, in order to qualify for this
liability shield, a Web-site operator must take certain steps.
First, Web operators must
adopt a termination policy for subscribers who repeatedly post
infringing content. This policy ought to be set forth in a
subscription or Web-hosting agreement, as well as on the "terms
of use" statement on its Web site.
Second, an agent must be designated by a Web-site operator to
receive notifications of claimed infringements. This allows an
aggrieved party, such as the photographer in the above scenario,
to contact and notify the Web operator of an alleged
infringement.
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