Wikipedia
The news of the encyclopedia of Gaissa.com is coming from Wikipedia, in the respect of the license
Gnu (here or here). The areas of
Gaissa.com that use the news of Wikipedia are:
1. Board Game
2. Card Game
3. Game Sport
4. Country house Game
5. Curiosity
Information are released according to the rules established by the license
Gnu (here or here).
The Wikipedia
copyrights is here.
Users' rights and obligations
If you want to use Wikipedia materials in your
own books/articles/web sites or other publications, you can do so,
but you have to follow the GFDL. If you are simply duplicating the
Wikipedia article, you must follow section
two (or here) of the GFDL on verbatim
copying, as discussed at Wikipedia:Verbatim
copying.
If you create a derivative version by changing
or adding content, this entails the following:
- your materials in turn have to be licensed
under GFDL,
- you must acknowledge the authorship of the
article (section 4B), and
- you must provide access to the
"transparent copy" of the material (section 4J). (The
"transparent copy" of a Wikipedia article is any of a
number of formats available from us, including the wiki text,
the html web pages, xml feed, etc.)
You may be able to partially fulfill the
latter two obligations by providing a conspicuous direct link back
to the Wikipedia article hosted on this website. You also need to
provide access to a transparent copy of the new text. However,
please note that the Wikimedia Foundation makes no guarantee to
retain authorship information and a transparent copy of articles.
Therefore, you are encouraged to provide this authorship information
and a transparent copy with your derived works.
Verbatim
Copying
You may copy and distribute the Document in any medium, either
commercially or noncommercially, provided that this License, the
copyright notices, and the license notice saying this License
applies to the Document are reproduced in all copies, and that you
add no other conditions whatsoever to those of this License. You may
not use technical measures to obstruct or control the reading or
further copying of the copies you make or distribute. However, you
may accept compensation in exchange for copies. If you distribute a
large enough number of copies you must also follow the conditions in
section 3.
You may also lend copies, under the same conditions stated above,
and you may publicly display copies.