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Revision as of 18:57, 28 September 2008 view sourceSouthernSteel (talk | contribs)2 edits About Us← Previous edit Revision as of 19:24, 28 September 2008 view source Gogo Dodo (talk | contribs)Administrators197,922 edits Revert to revision 241527612 dated 2008-09-28 13:29:06 by MrOllie using popupsNext edit →
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The public domain is a range of abstract materials – commonly referred to as intellectual property – which are not owned or controlled by anyone. A public domain work is a work whose author has either relinquished, or no longer can claim control over the distribution and usage of the work. As such any person may manipulate, distribute or otherwise utilise the work, without legal ramifications. A work released as public domain by its author is free and ].<ref name="jargon">{{cite web |url=http://www.catb.org/jargon/html/C/copycenter.html |title=Copycenter |author=] |work=] |accessdate=2008-08-09 }}</ref> The public domain is a range of abstract materials – commonly referred to as intellectual property – which are not owned or controlled by anyone. A public domain work is a work whose author has either relinquished, or no longer can claim control over the distribution and usage of the work. As such any person may manipulate, distribute or otherwise utilise the work, without legal ramifications. A work released as public domain by its author is free and ].<ref name="jargon">{{cite web |url=http://www.catb.org/jargon/html/C/copycenter.html |title=Copycenter |author=] |work=] |accessdate=2008-08-09 }}</ref>


=== Copyleft ===
{{main|Copyleft}}
]
{{selfref|For how copyleft is used to provide a collaboration framework for Misplaced Pages, see ]}}


Copyleft is a play on the word copyright and describes the practice of using copyright law to remove restrictions on distributing copies and modified versions of a work. The aim of copyleft is to use the legal framework of copyright to enable non-author parties to be able to reuse and, in many licencing schemes, modify content that is created by an author. Unlike public domain work, the author still maintains copyright over the material, however the author has granted a non-exclusive licence to any person to distribute, and often modify, the work. Some copyleft licenses require that any ] be distributed under the same terms, and that the original copyright notices be maintained.
== '''Southern Steel Structurals India''' ==


Unlike the copyright symbol, the copyleft symbol does not carry any legal connotations
== '''About Us''' ==


==== Examples ====
'''Southern steel Structurals India (SSS India)'''was established in 1996. At Cape comarian Tamil nadu state India.
Copyleft work has traditionally been associated with ], ] software, such as software distributed by the ]. However more recently, open access work, such as the ], has brought copyleft to academic, and other disciplines {{vague}}.


==== Criticism ====
We are a leading Engineering and construction company from south
{{main|Copyleft#Is_copyleft_"viral"?|l1=Copyleft}}
India Engaged with Piping and Structural Fabrication and Erection works.
Copyleft licenses are sometimes referred to as viral copyright licenses, because any works derived from a copyleft work must themselves be copyleft when distributed.
For the industrial and infrastructure development, with
a dedicated staff of over fifty engineers, Specialists and support personals.
The company offers the complete spectrum of all related heavy structural
technologies from raw materials to finished products and all type of fabrication
and erection of pipe lines and equipments.

Our mission to perform first quality construction and Engineering works
for Piping, Structural Fabrication and Erection, Equipment Erection, and
Plant Maintenance. Experience and innovations have allover us to provide
in valuable service to Steel, Cement, Power, Refinery, Pharmaceuticals
Fertilizer, Nuclear, Shipping, Offshore, Onshore Companies in southern region.
We’ve built Pipe lines, Structural, Vessels, Storage tanks and Oil terminals for
large projects. In addition to our capacity and experience we place a lot of
importance on a healthy and safe working environment.
Till date Southern Steel Structurals India (SSS India)
and associated companies has successfully engineers and completed more
than fifty projects in India.

'''Southern Steel Structurals India (SSS India)''' is
unique is that it has at its disposal in depth operational process and metallurgical
know-how in addition to environmental and automation expertise.
These assets coupled with our broad experience turnkey capability.
Professional project management and dedication to the success of our customers.
May we invite you to contact our experts and to discover why
we proud of saying Technology is our trade mark.
'''Southern Steel Structurals India''' currently looking
to expand its operations to other part of the world

== '''Commitment – Concern - Dedication.''' ==


• Highly individualized project attention
• Excel at schedule critical work.
• Quality workman ship.
• Safe working environment.
• Dedicated to customer satisfaction.
• Highly experienced, well equipped personal for . fabrication and installation.
• Timely efficient, cost effective, personalized, service . from first contact to finished product.

Visit.www.southernsteelindia.com

Email.gksouthernsteel@yahoo.com.
gk@southernsteelindia.com.
southernsteelindia@hotmail.com.


== '''Registered Office.''' ==


Southern Steel Structurals India
64/A,Opp.C.B.H,Assambu road,
Vadasary,Nagercoil,K.K.Dict,
Zip. 629001. Tamilnadu, India.
Tel. +914652007183, Mob.+919994007183


== '''Corporate Office.''' ==


Southern Steel Structurals India
11/4-14,Mullai Nager,Mecheri
Mattur Main road,Salem Dict,
Zip.636453,Tamilnadu

Tel. +914298291177, Mob.+919362007183

'''Contact Person Mr. K.Gopakumar. Director Projects''']


== References == == References ==

Revision as of 19:24, 28 September 2008

This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.
Find sources: "Free content" – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (April 2008) (Learn how and when to remove this message)

Free content, or free information, is any kind of functional work, artwork, or other creative content having no significant legal restriction relative to people's freedom to use, redistribute, and produce modified versions of and works derived from the content. It is distinct from Open content in that it can be modified, whereas one might not have that ability with content that is simply "open", and not "free".

Free content encompasses all works in the public domain and also those copyrighted works whose licenses honor and uphold the freedoms mentioned above. Because the law by default grants copyright holders monopolistic control over their creations, copyrighted content must be explicitly declared free, usually by the referencing or inclusion of licensing statements from within the work.

Though a work which is in the public domain because its copyright has expired is considered free, it can easily become non-free again with all its derivatives becoming non-free or illegal, if the copyright law changes.

Copyright

Traditional Copyright

Main article: Copyright
The copyright symbol
For Misplaced Pages policy about copyright issues, see Misplaced Pages:Copyrights

Traditionally, copyright is a legal concept, which grants the author or creator of a work, legal rights to control the distribution and display of their work, in many jurisdicitons this is limited by a time period after which the works then enter the public domain. During the time period of copyright the author's work may only be distributed, displayed or modified with the consent of the author, usually via a copyright licence

From the perspective of free content, traditional usages of copyright is limiting in several ways. It limits the distribution of the work of the author to those who can, or are willing to, afford the payment of royalties to the author for usage of the authors content. Secondly it creates a perceived barrier between authors, which limits modification of the work, such as in the form of mashups and collaborative content.

Public Domain

Main article: Public domain For how the public domain applies to Misplaced Pages, see Misplaced Pages:Public domain.

The public domain is a range of abstract materials – commonly referred to as intellectual property – which are not owned or controlled by anyone. A public domain work is a work whose author has either relinquished, or no longer can claim control over the distribution and usage of the work. As such any person may manipulate, distribute or otherwise utilise the work, without legal ramifications. A work released as public domain by its author is free and copycenter.

Copyleft

Main article: Copyleft
The copyleft symbol
For how copyleft is used to provide a collaboration framework for Misplaced Pages, see Misplaced Pages:The 💕

Copyleft is a play on the word copyright and describes the practice of using copyright law to remove restrictions on distributing copies and modified versions of a work. The aim of copyleft is to use the legal framework of copyright to enable non-author parties to be able to reuse and, in many licencing schemes, modify content that is created by an author. Unlike public domain work, the author still maintains copyright over the material, however the author has granted a non-exclusive licence to any person to distribute, and often modify, the work. Some copyleft licenses require that any derivative works be distributed under the same terms, and that the original copyright notices be maintained.

Unlike the copyright symbol, the copyleft symbol does not carry any legal connotations

Examples

Copyleft work has traditionally been associated with free, open source software, such as software distributed by the GNU project. However more recently, open access work, such as the Public Library of Science, has brought copyleft to academic, and other disciplines .

Criticism

Main article: Copyleft

Copyleft licenses are sometimes referred to as viral copyright licenses, because any works derived from a copyleft work must themselves be copyleft when distributed.

References

  1. Richard Stallman (2008-03-20). "Free Software and Free Manuals". Free Software Foundation. Retrieved 2008-08-08.
  2. Nate Anderson (2008-07-16). "EU caves to aging rockers, wants 45-year copyright extension if the copyright law changes". Ars Technica. Retrieved 2008-08-08.
  3. Eric S. Raymond. "Copycenter". The Jargon File. Retrieved 2008-08-09.

See also

External links

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