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Visit Springer Nature`s Copyright and Piracy Policy page for more information. Like many other scientific publishers, Springer requires authors to transfer copyright before the publication of articles by subscription. This allows Springer to reproduce, publish, distribute and archive the article in print and electronic form and to defend against misuse of the article. By signing the Copyright Transfer Declaration, you always retain essential rights, such as . B self-archiving. Explanations of SpringerOpen`s License Agreement No CopyrightThe person who associated a work with this document dedicated the work to the public domain by waiving all of their copyrights in the work worldwide, including all related and related rights, to the extent permitted by law. You may copy, modify, distribute and perform the Work, even for commercial purposes, without asking permission. For more information, see below. This liberal license is best suited to facilitate the transfer and growth of scientific knowledge. The Open Access Scholarly Publishers Association (OASPA) therefore strongly recommends the use of CC BY for open access publication of research literature, and many research funders around the world recommend or order that research supported by them be published under CC BY. Examples of such measures are donors as diverse as the Wellcome Trust, Australian governments, the European Commission`s Horizon 2020 framework programme or the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation. An author may self-archive a version of his article created by the author on his own website and in the repository of his institution, including its final version; however, he may not use the PDF version of the PUBLISHER published on www.springerlink.com. In addition, the author may only publish his version by indicating the original source of publication and a link to the article published on the Springer website will be inserted.

The link must be accompanied by the following text: “The original publication is available from www.springerlink.com.” The publication of an open access article leaves the copyright to the author. You can choose to publish your article in open access in Springer`s Open Choice program or in one of our SpringerOpen journals. The article is published under the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC-BY), which allows users to read, copy, distribute, and create derivative works from the material as long as the author of the original work is cited. For more information about copyright and licensing for each of our open access trademarks, see: The author is invited to use the appropriate DOI for the article (go to the linking options in the article, then to OpenURL and use the link with the DOI). Articles distributed by www.springerlink.com are indexed, abstracted and referenced by numerous abstract and information services, bibliographic networks, subscription agencies, library networks and consortia. Open access articles (in hybrid or fully open access journals) do not require the transfer of copyright; the copyright remains the property of the authors. By opting for Open Access, you agree to publish your article under the Creative Commons Attribution license (effective January 16, 2012). Articles published before this date are subject to the creative commons non-commercial attribution license. In general, authors are asked to transfer the copyright of their article to the publisher (or to grant the publisher exclusive publishing and distribution rights).

This ensures the greatest possible protection and dissemination of information under copyright laws. The copyright to this article belongs to the Japan Society of Human Genetics and springer-Verlag (for the United States). Government employees: when they are transferable) in effect if and when the article is accepted for publication. The author guarantees that his contribution is original and that he has full authority to award this grant. The author signs and assumes responsibility for the publication of this material on behalf of all co-authors. The transfer of copyright includes the exclusive right to reproduce and distribute the article, including reprints, translations, photographic reproductions, microforms, electronic forms (offline, online) or other reproductions of a similar nature. If you are employed by the U.S. government or the Crown, you can request that the copyright not be transferred to the MyPublication phase. Once you have provided the name of your employer, you no longer need to sign the copyright transfer declaration. [End of SpringerOpen License Agreement]____ This open data policy follows the same logic and allows maximum benefit and the greatest possible reuse of knowledge. It is also true that in some jurisdictions, copyright does not apply to data. CC0 waives all possible copyrights, to the extent legally possible, as well as the obligation to name.

The waiver applies to the data, not to the presentation of the data. Yes, for example. B a table or illustration with research data is reproduced, CC BY and the attribute obligation apply. Increasingly, however, the use of big data techniques such as data mining is enabling new insights that make the entire digital data corpus usable. In such cases, attribution is often not technically feasible due to the mass of data obtained, making CC0 the most appropriate authorisation tool for the search results generated by these innovative techniques. In cases where authors are not allowed to retain copyright in their own article (for example, if the author is a U.S. government employee), authors should contact us before submitting their article so that we can let you know if their non-standard copyright claim can be considered. Please refer to the details on how to submit your application to the Copyright Authorization Center when you are looking for permissions to request information about the reuse of material from a book or journal. If you are unable to use this service, please contact: By submitting an article to one of the journals published by SpringerOpen, I confirm this: The licensor cannot revoke these freedoms as long as you comply with the terms of the BMC SpringerOpen Nature Research Palgrave Macmillan Springer Authors license grants the publisher a license to publish the article and identify you as the original publisher. Authors also grant third parties the right to freely use the article as long as its integrity is maintained and its original authors, citation details and publishers are identified. Note: For the italicized terms in the summary above, you can find more details on the Creative Commons website where the summary comes from (creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/). The copyright of all open access articles remains the property of the authors.

It is important to distinguish between legal requirements and community standards. .