This document answers several Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ) about W3C intellectual rights policies. The primary goals of these policies are:
These three:
Please see W3C Trademark and Servicemark License for more information on the treatment of W3C trademarks.
Yes, see the list of W3C Trademarks and Generic Terms.
W3C is a contractual entity arising from agreements between the "Host institutions" and W3C Members. W3C Trademarks are managed through a joint agreement among the Host institutions.
Please see the W3C Logo and Icon Usage for policies on logos, including the W3C Logo.
Here is the suggested text:
'TheTrademark' is a (common law | registered) trademark of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, European Research Consortium for Informatics and Mathematics, or Keio University on behalf of the World Wide Web Consortium.
The W3C Document License governs the distribution of W3C Documents.
The original author of the document. Many documents are created by the W3C and W3C consequently holds the copyright. Owners who allow their works to be published on the W3C site retain the copyright, but agree to the W3C license for the redistribution of those materials from our site.
Yes. See the next question for information about attribution.
Note: W3C disapproves of and will act upon the misrepresentation of our work with respect to authorship, endorsement, or status.
Unless otherwise stated, documents on the W3C site are published under the W3C Document License. The Document License contains the requirements for attribution. An example attribution would look like the following:
Getting Started with the W3C I18n site, Richard Ishida, ed. Copyright © 2009 W3C ® (MIT, ERCIM, Keio), All Rights Reserved.
For the authoritative answer to that question, we suggest starting with the Creative Commons FAQ intended to help answer the question: How do I properly attribute a Creative Commons licensed work?. An example attribution might look like the following:
Developing a Web Accessibility Business Case for Your Organization, Shawn Lawton Henry and Andrew Arch, eds. Copyright © 2010 W3C ® (MIT, ERCIM, Keio, Beihang). Licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 License. Status: Updated 23 September 2010.
No and no. W3C does not, in general permit derivative works created from its specifications in order to avoid interoperability problems.
Yes. Note that your browser quite likely enables you to print documents with the source URL displayed at the top or bottom of the page; this is useful to ensuring that people are aware of the document origin. Please also direct your students' attention to the document's copyright notice.
Yes.
Yes, if you believe your usage falls within the exception of fair use (e.g., in the U.S. § 107 Title 17. Limitations on exclusive rights: Fair use).
Yes.
In general, no. We discourage the republication of large excerpts due to the risk of interoperability issues. You may send a request to site-policy@w3.org.
Yes. General information about translations is available, including the list of known translations.
To translate a Technical Reports, please first inform the W3C of your intention by sending an message in English to w3c-translators@w3.org [public archive] and — if provided — the comments email list associated with that document. In your message, state that you agree to the following terms:
In the translation, you must include the following information in the target language:
This disclosure should be made in a prominent location, generally a header and/or footer that wraps the translated specification. It is important that no changes in meaning be made to any part of the W3C document including the Status Section, contributors, or appendices. If comments or annotations are absolutely necessary within the content of the specification, those annotations must be clearly represented as such. (example)
You MUST retain the English version of the copyright notice in your translation. You MAY (but are not required to) also include a translated version of the copyright notice per Translations of the W3C Copyright Notice.
Please inform us when you have completed the translation by sending a message to w3c-translators@w3.org.
See our patent policy FAQ for information about translations and patent commitments.
Yes, provided you ask for and receive permission. Documents that are not Technical Reports are likely to change frequently. Please mail your request to the document author/editor and cc the w3c-translators@w3.org mailing list. If you receive permission, the process thereafter is the same as for Technical Reports.
No. However, the W3C Policy for Authorized W3C Translations enables you to have your translation authorized by W3C and the community. W3C created this policy in 2005 so that translations in languages other than English may be used for official purposes. Examples include: a standardization authority in a country that wishes to standardize on a W3C Recommendation, but requires the usage of a local language; or a local government plans to reference the Web Content Accessibility Guidelines in their regulations, but requires a translation of the guidelines in the local language to do so.
See our patent policy FAQ for information about translations and patent commitments.
There are two types of annotations mechanisms:
Annotations of the first type are links to the W3C site and are permitted as described elsewhere in this FAQ.
Annotations of the second type (including the reorganization and excerption of copyrighted material) are derivative works. In some cases W3C grants permission to create derivative works of this sort.
To request permission to create such a work, please inform the W3C of your intention by sending an message in English to site-policy@w3.org and — if provided — the comments email list associated with that document. In your message, state that you agree to the following terms:
In the annotated version, you must include the following information:
This disclosure should be made in a prominent location, generally a header and/or footer that wraps the translated specification. It is important that no changes in meaning be made to any part of the W3C document including the Status Section, contributors, or appendices. If comments or annotations are absolutely necessary within the content of the specification, those annotations must be clearly represented as such. (example)
Please inform us when you have published the annotated version by sending a message to site-policy@w3.org.
The creation of a reformatted work is a derivative work. In some cases W3C grants permission to create derivative works of this sort.
To request permission to create such a work, please inform the W3C of your intention by sending an message in English to site-policy@w3.org and — if provided — the comments email list associated with that document. In your message, state that you agree to the following terms:
In the reformatted version, you must include the following information:
This disclosure should be made in a prominent location, generally a header and/or footer that wraps the reformatted specification. It is important that no changes in meaning be made to any part of the W3C document including the Status Section, contributors, or appendices. If comments or annotations are absolutely necessary within the content of the specification, those annotations must be clearly represented as such. (example)
Please inform us when you have published the annotated version by sending a message to site-policy@w3.org.
Please see our policy about Relicensing Unfinished W3C Specifications.
The W3C Software License governs the reuse and modification of W3C software.
Yes. The W3C Software License allows derivative works provided that you comply with the terms of the license. In a few instances, software distributed by the W3C is provided by another entity under specific terms and conditions which must be followed. Please review any notices or disclosures that accompany the software itself.
Yes to both, provided you comply with the terms of the W3C Software License. To summarize the terms, you must:
Software that is free from any claims beyond W3C terms and conditions is compatible with the GNU General Public License (GPL) and may be redistributed under the GPL. The GPL ensures users always have the ability to run, change, or redistribute software with or without changes; it also prevents such software from being bundled with closed/proprietary software such that users lose their rights to that free code in the new product. The W3C is compatible with this license and can be redistributed while complying with both the W3C and GPL software license.
Yes. The W3C license permits W3C code to be used in other (non-copyleft) licenses or even proprietary software.
The W3C Software License.
If you use a software library (such as libwww) and include it in the source code, or compile/link to it, you must also include the copyright license. However, if you merely provide a compile option you are not obligated to include the copyright license. Any subsequent party that links or includes against the library is obligated to include the license. (If you include the option, you might do your users a favor by pointing to it yourself.)
To restate our policy: it is the responsibility of the person who causes our software to be included in subsequent distributions (either in source, object, or executable code) to abide by our terms.
If you wish to contribute code via CVS to W3C Open Source Software, please:
Note that that you will be bound by the following terms when you contribute code:
Please see Policies for Contribution of Test Cases to W3C.
Yes to both. We encourage you to contact the authors and let them know about your improvements. Amaya is covered by the generic notice and the W3C Software License.
You may not make changes to Amaya and continue to call it by a trademarked term or misrepresent the origin, capabilities, or liabilities associated with its use. You may make valid assertions, such that it is based on Amaya code, or that it is compliant with a Recommended Specification of the W3C.
No. Links are merely references to other sites. No permission is required to link to w3.org or to any other website. For more information, see the W3C Recommendation "Architecture of the World Wide Web, Volume 1" (section 3.5.2 in particular), the Technical Architecture Group (TAG) finding "Deep Linking" in the World Wide Web as well as the essay by Tim Berners-Lee on link myths.
Please note that any form of misrepresentation of W3C work or your relation to W3C, whether achieved through links, frames, URL manipulations, server redirects, or other means, is forbidden. For instance, do not use mislead readers into thinking that W3C content is published by anyone other than W3C. It is your obligation to be clear in your representations; W3C does not sign waivers about who may link to us.
Yes. As long as the screen shot is not used in any manner that implies W3C sponsorship or endorsement of your product, service, or Internet site, no permission is required to use a screen shot. We do, however, appreciate that you notify us by email to site-policy@w3.org, with a reference to the screen shot (i.e., a URI is preferred over an attached copy of the screen shot) and a brief description of the intended use.
Screenshots MUST NOT be used to circumvent W3C's logo usage policy.