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authorNick White <git@njw.me.uk>2011-09-29 20:25:48 +0100
committerNick White <git@njw.me.uk>2011-09-29 20:25:48 +0100
commitcd94f97e197faeb5535218ed3f2be3a1b78a106d (patch)
tree83da94e72c557997817353da5604c6bbe981c3e9
parent3cc37a9dd973a9d5db20944b5c06af3fa27694ad (diff)
Add amazon info to LEGAL
-rw-r--r--LEGAL39
1 files changed, 38 insertions, 1 deletions
diff --git a/LEGAL b/LEGAL
index 1e788d9..3cf15ea 100644
--- a/LEGAL
+++ b/LEGAL
@@ -1,6 +1,17 @@
+# Overview
+
+None of the getxbook tools seek to hide what they do. They use
+the User Agent getxbook (though this can be easily changed in
+util.c, or by using a proxy).
+
+While legal "agreements" (which company lawyers consider signed
+by use of the service) tend to be hostile, using the standard
+for determining what an automated tool is allowed to do on a
+server, robots.txt, all of the getxbook tools are permitted.
+
# Getgbook
-## TOS
+## Terms of Service
Google's terms of service are ambiguous. On the one hand they
forbid using anything but a browser to access their sites.
@@ -28,3 +39,29 @@ So, we append that to the urls (it has no effect on them), and
we are obeying robots.txt
Details on how Google interprets robots.txt are at
http://code.google.com/web/controlcrawlindex/docs/robots_txt.html
+
+# Getabook
+
+## Conditions of Use
+
+With Amazon, massive overreach rules the day. In the "license and
+site access" section of Amazon.com's Conditions of Use, they state
+that downloading any part of their website except for page caching
+is forbidden, and that using "robots, or similar data gathering
+and extraction tools" is also not allowed.
+http://www.amazon.com/gp/help/customer/display.html/ref=x?nodeId=508088
+
+Thankfully, however, the rules set out in Amazon's robots.txt tells
+a different story. Given that these explicitly lay down the rules
+for automated downloading tools, it seems reasonable too take them
+as representative of accepted policy.
+
+## robots.txt
+
+Amazon's main robots.txt allows all of the request types we make.
+
+## Curious
+
+One other curious sentiment in the Conditions of Use is the clause
+"we each waive any right to a jury trial." Amazon's is truly a
+Brave New World.