RetroTechCollection:Copyrights
This page explains RetroTechCollection’s policies on copyright and licensing for content—text, images, diagrams, schematics, software listings, and other media—hosted on the site.
Purpose
editThis policy ensures that material on RetroTechCollection respects the rights of original creators, avoids infringement, and clearly communicates the licensing terms under which content is made available.
1. Scope
editThis policy applies to all content contributed by users or imported from external sources, including:
- Photographs of hardware, screenshots, scans, and diagrams
- Excerpts from technical manuals, service guides, or datasheets
- Software listings, ROM code snippets, and BASIC programs
- Logos, trademarks, and branding assets
2. Public Domain and Free Licenses
edit2.1 Public Domain
editMaterial in the public domain may be freely reproduced. Acceptable sources include:
- Expired copyrights (typically 70 years after author’s death, varies by jurisdiction)
- US Government works not subject to copyright
- Works explicitly dedicated to the public domain (e.g., CC0)
When using public domain content, state:
''This image/manual/page is in the public domain.'' Source: [URL or reference]
2.2 Free and Open Licenses
editContent under a compatible free license may be used, provided attribution and license terms are honored. Accepted licenses include:
- Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY)
- Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike (CC BY-SA)
- GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL)
- MIT, BSD, or similarly permissive text licenses
Include a clear license statement on the page or file description:
''Licensed under {{cc-by-sa|4.0}}.'''
Source: [URL or reference]
3. Fair Use and Non-Free Content
editRetroTechCollection discourages non-free content unless strictly necessary. Permissible only if:
- No free alternative exists.
- The use is minimal and illustrative (e.g., one diagram from a manual).
- The use adds significant new context or commentary (transformative).
- You provide:
- Description of the work
- Purpose of use (e.g., critical analysis, documentation)
- Amount used (e.g., one figure)
- Justification of fair use under U.S. law or local equivalents
Use the
Non-free file usage justification
template on pages containing fair-use content:
{{non-free
| source = '''Electroluminescent display schematic''', ''Commodore SX-64 Service Manual'', 1984
| rationale = '''Illustration of EL backlight circuit; no free equivalent available.'''
| resolution = 600×400px
}}
4. Uploading and Attribution
edit4.1 Local vs. Commons
edit- Local upload—Use when fair use or non-free restrictions apply. Files remain on RetroTechCollection servers.
- Commons upload—Preferred for PD or freely licensed content. Increases discoverability and reuse.
4.2 Required Information
editWhen uploading any media, include:
- Title and description of the work
- Author/creator name
- Source URL or publication reference (manual name, date, page)
- Licensing information (public domain, CC BY-SA, fair use rationale)
Example file description:
== Summary ==
Photo of Commodore 64C motherboard (ASSY 250469).
== Source ==
Own photograph, May 2025.
== Licensing ==
{{cc-by|4.0}}
5. Text Content and Excerpts
editRetroTechCollection’s text content should be:
- Original writing or paraphrased summaries of sources.
- Limited quotations (≤ 10% of freely available text) with clear blockquote markup and source attribution.
For longer technical excerpts (e.g., code listings, register tables), prefer linking to an external public-domain or freely licensed PDF, or host on Commons under appropriate license.
6. Trademarks and Logos
editRegistered trademarks (e.g., “Commodore,” “Atari,” “Sega”) remain the property of their owners. Permissible uses:
- Identifying the subject of the page (nominative fair use).
- Using low-resolution logos for identification in infoboxes or galleries.
Always include:
''“XYZ” is a registered trademark of XYZ Corporation. Used here under nominative fair use for identification purposes only.''
7. Derivative Works
editWhen creating diagrams, schematics, or annotated images:
- Base your work on public-domain or freely licensed originals, or
- Substantially transform copyrighted material (e.g., redrawn, colorized, annotated).
- Credit the original source and clearly distinguish your additions.
8. Takedown and Enforcement
editIf you believe content on RetroTechCollection infringes copyright:
- Contact Support with details:
- Page/file name
- Link to original work
- Evidence of infringement
- RetroTechCollection will review and, if necessary, remove or replace the content promptly.
9. Further Reading and Resources
edit