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1.3 Copying Conditions

Inside the CentOS Artwork Repository you can find content branded by The CentOS Project and content not branded at all. Contents branded by The CentOS Project contain either The CentOS Trademark, The CentOS Logo or The CentOS Symbol. Content branded by The CentOS Project cannot be redistributed without previous conversation with The CentOS Project. However, you can study and modify both content branded by The CentOS Project and content not branded at all in the sake of proposing improvements to The CentOS Project corporate visual identity.

If you are using the CentOS Artwork Repository for producing your own corporate visual identity, you should remove all The CentOS Trademarks from your contents and rename the repository to something other than CentOS Artwork Repository.

The CentOS Artwork Repository organizes files in a very specific way to implement The CentOS Project corporate visual identity. This very specific organization of files is part of centos-art.sh script, a bash script that automates most of the frequent tasks inside the repository.

1.3.1 The centos-art.sh script

The centos-art.sh script and the organization of files it needs to work are not in the public domain; they are copyrighted and there are restrictions on their distribution, but these restrictions are designed to permit everything that a good cooperating citizen would want to do. What is not allowed is to try to prevent others from further sharing any version of this program that they might get from you.

Specifically, we want to make sure that you have the right to give away copies of centos-art.sh script, that you receive source code or else can get it if you want it, that you can change this program or use pieces of it in new free programs, and that you know you can do these things.

To make sure that everyone has such rights, we have to forbid you to deprive anyone else of these rights. For example, if you distribute copies of the centos-art.sh script, you must give the recipients all the rights that you have. You must make sure that they, too, receive or can get the source code. And you must tell them their rights.

Also, for our own protection, we must make certain that everyone finds out that there is no warranty for the centos-art.sh script. If this program is modified by someone else and passed on, we want their recipients to know that what they have is not what we distributed, so that any problems introduced by others will not reflect on our reputation.

The precise conditions of the license for the centos-art.sh script are found in the General Public Licenses that accompany it (see `trunk/COPYING' file). This manual specifically is covered by the GNU Free Documentation License.

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