The fact you clicked on this page would seem to indicate you have a conscience and some degree of common sense. The page looks like an overbearing legal jungle, and it is.

I’ll explain it in one sentence.

Don’t steal my stuff.

Of course, blogging is a community and you’re welcome to snip bits out and quote me and draw inspiration or anger. Just send me a courtesy linkback, I’m really very friendly.

This blog has a Creative Commons License.

somerights20 Copyright

To read a human-readable summary of the legal code, click here.
To read the full license, click here.

All material on Existential Rage by Hadleigh Roberts is copyrighted and you will need to observe these regulations when you plan to distribute or use any content in this blog. Please read the following carefully.

This might seem heavy-handed, but in most cases if I am notified and properly credited, I will be delighted for you to reproduce my work. If you would like to use content here for commerical or professional purposes, the same rules apply.

Copyright Regulations for Content on Hadleigh Roberts

You are free to share, distribute or transmit any work on this blog under the following conditions:

Attribution:

  • You must attribute the content that you have used by prominently displaying a credit link back to the specific article page. The credit link used should point to the article page and not just the homepage.

Content Usage Limit:

  • You are not allowed to republish an ENTIRE article or blog post on your website or print publication even if attribution is made. Only excerpts from each article can be published elsewhere. An attribution link must be included even if you use an excerpt.

Noncommercial Usage:

  • You may not use this work for commercial purposes unless given pre-authorization. Content on Existential Rage cannot be packaged and sold to anyone nor can it be used in its entirety as a free gift or bonus for a commercial product.

If you want to syndicate or distribute the full article on your website, please contact me for permission. Permission must be granted before you do so.