Licence & Copyright
Licence and Copyright agreement for Caryologia
(revised April 2019)
The following licence and copyright agreement is valid for any article published by Caryologia.
Author's certification
By submitting the manuscript, the authors certify the following:
-
They are authorized by their co-authors to enter into these arrangements.
- The work described has not been published before (except in the form of an abstract or proceedings-type publication – including discussion papers – or as part of a published lecture or thesis); it is not under consideration for publication elsewhere; and its publication has been approved by all the author(s) and by the responsible authorities – tacitly or explicitly – of the institutes where the work was carried out.
- They have secured the right to reproduce any material that has already been published or copyrighted elsewhere.
- They agree to the following licence and copyright agreement.
Copyright
-
The copyright of any article is retained by the author(s). More information on the transfer of copyright can be found below.
-
Authors grant Caryologia a licence to publish the article and identify itself as the original publisher.
-
Authors grant any third party the right to use the article freely under the stipulation that the original authors are given credit and the appropriate citation details are mentioned.
-
The article is distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License. Unless otherwise stated, associated published material is distributed under the same licence.
Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License
Anyone is free to share — to copy, distribute, and transmit the work to remix — to adapt the work under the following conditions:
- Attribution — The original authors must be given credit.
- For any reuse or distribution, it must be made clear to others what the licence terms of this work are.
- Any of these conditions can be waived if the copyright holders give permission.
- Nothing in this licence impairs or restricts the author's moral rights.
The full legal code of this licence.
Copyright transfers
Many authors have strict regulations in their employment contract regarding their publications. A transfer of copyright to the institution or company is common as well as the reservation of specific usage rights. In open-access publications in combination with the Creative Commons License, a transfer of the copyright to the institution is possible as it belongs to the author anyway. Any usage rights are regulated through the Creative Commons License. As Substantia uses the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License, anyone (the author, his/her institution/company, the publisher, as well as the public) is free to copy, distribute, transmit, and adapt the work as long as the original author is given credit (see above). Therefore, specific usage rights cannot be reserved by the author or his/her institution/company, and the publisher cannot include the statement "all rights reserved" in any published paper. A copyright transfer from the author to his/her institution/company can be expressed in a special "copyright statement" at the end of the publication. Authors are asked to include the following sentence: "The author's copyright for this publication has been transferred to institution/company".
Reproduction request
All articles published by Substantia are licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License (see details above) together with an author copyright. Therefore, there is no need from the publisher's side to give permission for the reproduction of articles. We suggest contacting the author to inform him/her about the further usage of the material. However, as the author decided to publish the scientific results under the CC-BY licence, he/she consented to share the work under the condition that the original authors be given credit.