XNet License Our AT&T Privacy Policy in easy, FAQ - TopicsExpress



          

XNet License Our AT&T Privacy Policy in easy, FAQ format. We understand that everyone thinks that privacy policies are long, complicated and difficult to understand. So were going to try to make this as simple as possible. DEFINITIONS Lets start with what we mean when we say: Aggregate Information: Information that we combine into anonymous groups of customers or users. One way to think of it is in terms of a survey or opinion poll. Aggregate information would tell you that 80 percent of the people voted for a candidate, but not who actually voted. These groups are large enough to reasonably prevent individuals from being identified. Anonymous Information: Information that doesnt directly identify and cant reasonably be used to identify an individual customer or user. Customer: Anyone who purchases or uses our products or services. When a customer purchases retail products or services for use by others, like a family account, those family members also are customers. Mobile Application: A software application that runs on smartphones, tablet computers or other mobile devices and that allows users to access a variety of services and information. Personal Information: Information that directly identifies or reasonably can be used to figure out the identity of a customer or user, such as your name, address, phone number and e-mail address. Personal Information does not include published listing information. Relevant Advertising: Uses aggregate information about groups of people (like age, ethnicity, income range, where those groups live and work, and their interests) to develop advertising that is more likely to be useful to that group. It does not use individual data about what a specific person might like. Online behavioral advertising is one type of relevant advertising. It uses interest categories based on the websites visited by groups of people to deliver advertising online. User: Anyone who visits our websites or uses our mobile applications. Website: And other terms like Internet site, site and web page all mean the same thing, namely any page or location on the Internet, no matter what device (cell phone, tablet, laptop, PC, etc.) or protocol (http, WAP, ftp or other) is used to access the page or location. XNet License™ Version 6.6 was a state-of-the-art licensing toolkit that gave your company a powerful marketing and selling advantage in the competitive software industry. XNet License allowed you to incorporate floating license, nodelock license and time-bomb license capabilities that simplified accounting and facilitated the sale of software to users on networks. Intelligent Software Solutions $750 + royalties Royalty-free pricing was also available. Whats with all the NeXT names? In this site and associated materials you will see many incarnations of the NeXTSTEP name: NextStep NeXTStep NeXTSTEP NeXTstep NEXTSTEP OpenStep OPENSTEP OpenStep for Solaris OPENSTEP for Windows How could there be so many ways to type NeXTSTEP and then OpenStep? Was there no corporate standards to control their brand? In fact standards were strictly adhered to and each of the above examples had well defined and unique meaning. For example: NeXT corporate name was always done with the lowecase e. The NeXT logo had to be tilted at exactly 27.5 degrees The exact Pantone colors were demanded on all Dealer Materials NeXTStep was used to indicate the whole system (GUI, Apps, MachOS, etc.) that was run on NeXT hardware. NeXTSTEP was used to indicate the whole system (originally NeXTStep) but now for NeXT and Intel computers. NeXTstep was used to indicate the package of GUI and API without the operating system for IBM was to add to AIX. NEXTSTEP was used when they added a PA/RISC version. Then it became NEXTSTEP/NeXT Computers, NEXTSTEP/Intel, NEXTSTEP/SPARC and NEXTSTEP/PA-RISC. OpenStep was a declaration that the NeXT Operating System was available to other hardware vendors. Hence the Open in its name. It was not a product but an Application Interface (API) definition which a vendor needed to support fully in order to call their system OpenStep compliant. OPENSTEP was NeXTs implementation of the OpenStep specification. In chronological sequence you could consider it NEXTSTEP 4.0. There were versions for the original NeXT hardware, Intel based PCs and eventually SPARC. OpenStep for Solaris was Suns implementation of the OpenStep standard. It was based on source code Sun purchased from NeXT. It was layered on the X Window system, which in turn was layered on top of Suns operating system, Solaris. OPENSTEP for Windows was developed by NeXT. It layered OPENSTEP functionality on top of Windows NT. A more detailed explanation is provided at OpenStep Confusion: The Balloon Open Hardware License (BOHL) Version 0.2 For Discussion The Text of this License is Copyright © 2010 FLORENTINO PEREZ PREINT OF © 2010-2014 NeXT software inc. Permission is granted to copy this license unmodified and use it to protect Open Hardware Designs. Preamble This license agreement covers hardware designed, manufactured and distributed on an open basis. The license outlines the Terms and Conditions placed on the use of the design. When licensing Open Hardware it is important to note that there is a significant distinction between Open Hardware and Open Software particularly with respect to both the design process and the replication process. Firstly the design and replication of hardware is different because there are intermediate steps in the processes that are valuable in their own right. Secondly the process of replication can involve considerable time, cost and expertise. For these reasons it is not appropriate to simply transfer licenses that have validity in the software domain (such as the GPL) to the hardware domain. This license is intended to establish an Open Design approach in the hardware domain while building in practical safeguards, which are necessary for the design and manufacture of hardware, where manufacturers take a financial and legal risk when replicating Open Hardware and where the physical product must conform to approvals if its sale is to be legal. It is also important to protect designers from issues of liability particularly as many designers may be working as individuals and therefore not protected by an employer. The license is written to apply to any type of hardware produced using an Open Hardware design process. It has originated from the Balloon Project (balloonboard.org) but the license can be freely applied to any Open Hardware. In order to augment the text of the license it is accompanied by Notes and Appendices. The notes help to provide interpretation and guidance within the text of the license and the appendices contain more detailed discussions about the operation of the license and detail the types of Manufacturing Information and Design Documentation that might be provided as a part of any Open Hardware Design. The notes do not form part of the License but are intended to clarify the intention of the license. The Appendices are intended to provide uniformity to the way that hardware designs are released and managed when using this license. {Notes occur in the text of the License between curly brackets and in italics} Purpose The purpose of this license is to protect the designers of the hardware from any form of litigation resulting from its design, manufacture, distribution or use. Document Copyright © 2010 FLORENTINO PEREZ PREINT OF © 2010-2014 NeXT software inc. All Rights Reserved. 1 Document /Open Source Initiative OSI - TheX.Net, Inc. License (Xnet):Licensing > >[OSI Approved License] > > >The X.Net, Inc. License > > >Copyright (c) 2011 Florentino Perez J.R, California, USA > >Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining >a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the >Software), to deal in the Software without restriction, including >without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, >distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to >permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to >the following conditions: > >The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be >included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software. > >THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED AS IS, WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, >EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF >MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. >IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY >CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, >TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE >SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE. > >This agreement shall be governed in all respects by the laws of the >State of California and by the laws of the United States of America and The CLINTON Foundation. > >__________FLORENTINO PEREZ JR FIRST OF SPRING {{{CCO♣️capstobe♣️CCPD}}} XNet(FTL-TXT)PDM OBIT RIPper DRONES If you choose to enable Improve Maps, Apple will collect the GPS coordinates obtained through the Frequent Locations feature on your device and correlate them with the street address associated with your Apple ID. This will enable Apple to better approximate the geographic location of that and other addresses. Apple will only retain the resulting coordinates in an anonymous form to improve Maps and other Apple location-based products and services. You can turn off Improve Maps or Frequent Locations at any time under Settings> Privacy > Location Services > System Services.
Posted on: Thu, 23 Oct 2014 02:33:54 +0000

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