Copyright Notice
The Canadian Printing Industries Sector Council presents the http://www.cpisc-csic.ca Web site for our visitors' personal use, including educational and informational purposes. You can view and download material on this site for your personal use. You must retain and observe all of the proprietary and copyright notices on CPISC materials. You are not permitted to use, repost, modify, publish or duplicate CPISC content for commercial or other public use without securing specific written authorization from CPISC.
You should assume that everything on this site is copyrighted material, unless otherwise noted. This means you can't use it except as these terms and conditions apply, unless you have obtained written permission from CPSIC. For any material on this site supplied by third parties, written permission must be obtained from the lawful copyright owner before it can be used.
All logos, trademarks and recognizable images of persons and locations are either the property of CPISC, or are used on the site with permission. The re-use of these images by you or any other person is forbidden unless directly permitted by CPISC. Images of persons and places are strongly protected by Canadian and international copyright, privacy, trademark and regulatory body laws and regulations.
Other proprietary symbols, images, and language contained on the site should be assumed to be trademarks of CPISC and others. No site content grants any license, specific or implied for the use of trademarked information without you first obtaining the specific written permission of the lawful trademark owner. Any use of trademark content without written permission of the lawful trademark owner is forbidden.
Copyright
Copyright is a right granted by statute to the author or originator of certain literary or artistic productions, where the author or originator is invested, for a specified period of time, with the exclusive right to do and to authorize a number of acts. It grants the right to make copies and the related right to prevent others from making copies of the work. Copyright protection is utilized as a primary source of protection for traditional published materials as well as computer programs and other works in digital form, which, even when they exist in a form unintelligible to humans, such as object code, are considered to be literary works for the purposes of copyright law.

