Policy

If you are a legal copyright holder or a designated agent for such and you believe a post on this website falls outside the boundaries of “Fair Use” and legitimately infringes on yours or your clients copyright we may be contacted by using the “Contact” tab on this site:

This is a non-profit organization, owned by the people for the people. It is a public community of the most high, the one and only true GOD of Heaven.

Please notice in the categories, all content from the “Subscribed Feeds and associated sub-categories” is not content generated from this site. All content in this category is shared here only as an example of what is available and where it can be found.

This site makes no claim to the content or the site of the subscribed RSS Feeds. We accept no responsibility for the same nor do we necessarily agree with such content. This is merely a mirrored, shared resource, which is available to those whom wish to examine such content.

Since this content in the “Subscribed Feeds and associated sub-categories”, is merely mirrored from the source site, this site will not be held responsible for any copyright infringements any more than an echo in the Grand Canyon or the reflection in a mirror. We will therefore accept any and all RSS Feeds. Those whom choose not to participate are required to submit a written request of non-participation.

FREE SPEECH:

Email allows groups to grow from a dozen friends to a hundred hobbyists to a huge, national organization. Meanwhile, blogging is transforming journalism, and websites like Wikipedia and the Internet Archive are part of a new Library of Alexandria being built online.

In countless ways, the Internet is radically enhancing our access to information and empowering us to share ideas with the entire world. Speech thrives online, freed of limitations inherent in other media and created by traditional gatekeepers.

Preserving the Internet’s open architecture is critical to sustaining free speech. But this technological capacity means little without sufficient legal protections. If laws can censor you, limit access to certain information, or restrict use of communication tools, then the Internet’s incredible potential will go unrealized.

The government has time and again tried doing just that—indeed, censorship laws have often aimed at speech that could not be similarly restricted offline. And when old laws are not properly adapted to this medium, it’s all too easy for the government, companies, and individual litigants to undermine your rights.

EFF defends the Internet as a platform for free speech and believes that when you go online, your rights should come with you.

We at this site do claim the right to reproduce any and all content which in any way disputes, reinterprets or re-conceives our freedom of Religion and or Speech, in the existence of the original Bible and Judeo-Christian beliefs. We reserve this right as written in the following statute:

To determine whether a work constitutes fair use, courts engage in a case-by-case analysis and a flexible balancing of relevant factors. Campbell v. Acuff-Rose Music, Inc., 510 U.S. 569, 577-78 (1994). The Supreme Court recognized that science and art generally rely on works that came before them and rarely spring forth in a vacuum, and instructs courts to use the doctrine to limit the rights of a copyright owner regarding works that build upon, reinterpret, and reconceive existing works. See id. at 575-577.

May the one and only true GOD of Heaven, protect us as we seek to serve him.

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