THIS PROCESS IS FOR COPYRIGHT AND INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY CLAIMS ONLY!
For correspondence regarding any other matter or concern, you must use the Contact Us page instead.
If you believe that your work has been copied in a way that constitutes copyright infringement, or your intellectual property rights have been otherwise violated, please provide us a Notice with the following information in English
(your "Notice"):
- an electronic or physical signature of the person authorized to act on behalf of the owner of the copyright or other intellectual property interest;
- a description of the copyrighted work or other intellectual property that you claim has been infringed;
- a description of where the material that you claim is infringing is located on the HolisticAnywhere.com site, with enough detail that we may find it on the website (in most circumstances, we will need a URL);
- your address, telephone number, and email address;
- a statement by you that you have a good faith belief that the disputed use is not authorized by the copyright or intellectual property owner, its agent, or the law;
- a statement by you, made under penalty of perjury, that the above information in your Notice is accurate and that you are the copyright or intellectual property owner or authorized to act on the copyright or intellectual property owner's
behalf.
Note: If you are asserting infringement of an intellectual property right other than copyright, please specify the intellectual property right at issue (for example, 'trademark').
In some circumstances, in order to notify the person who provided the allegedly infringing content to which we have disabled access, we may forward a copy of a valid Notice including name and email address to that person, and we may forward a
copy of a valid Notice (with personally identifiable information removed) to one or more third parties such as Chilling Effects (http://www.chillingeffects.org) for publication.
IMPORTANT: Misrepresentations in your Notice may expose you to liability for damages (including costs and attorneys' fees). Courts have found that you must consider copyright defenses, limitations or exceptions before sending a
notice. A company paid more than $100,000 in costs and attorneys fees after wrongly targeting content protected by the U.S. fair use doctrine. Therefore, if you are not sure whether material available online infringes your
copyright, we suggest that you first contact an attorney.
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