INDIVIDUAL Purchasing a scene gives you the right to do the things we talk about below. Please remember that at all times scenestation.com retains copyright in the scene, the synopsis and the notes. You can rehearse and perform the scene with your scene partner. You can do this as many times as you'd like with as many scene partner's as you want to do it with! You can print the scene and make a couple of copies of it to use when you and your scene partner work on the scene. You can't give copies of it to all your friends so they can use the scene. If they want to use it, they should be buying their own copy! You can change a few words here or there, particularly if you want to localize the setting of the scene. However you can't re-write the scene. You can edit the scene if it is running too long for your purposes. This might happen if you are performing it in a showcase, or if you are filming it to go on your show reel, and there are time constraints. You can present the scene for other people to see as long as you aren't making money from this. If you are presenting the scene for other people and you are making money, then we should be getting a royalty payment. You should talk to us before you do this. If this confuses you, please email us. In fact email us with any questions you might have about the scenes and scenestation and we'll do our best to get back to you ASAP. You can film the scene so that you can use it for your or your scene partner's show reel. You can't sell the film of the scene or allow it to be shown on TV or at a short film festival or anything else like that. You can't put a written copy of the scene up on your own, or someone else's website, or other things like that. Scenestation.com is the only place that these scenes are legally available from. You must acknowledge scenestation.com if you perform the scene for an audience, or if you use the scene on your show-reel. The acknowledgement in programs, on your show-reel, etc, should look like this: "Name of Scene" from scenestation.com | SITE LICENCE SUBSCRIPTION Purchasing a site license gives you the right to do the things we talk about below. Please remember that at all times scenestation.com retains copyright in the scenes, the synopses and the notes. You can use all the scenes on the site from the date of your purchase for one year. After this, you can't use the scenes unless you pay a usage fee for each subsequent year. The usage fee will allow you to use the original scenes you downloaded plus any new scenes. Each year we will contact you via email one month before the expiry of your license to see if you'd like to renew your license for the following year. You can print the scenes and make copies of them to distribute to the students who will be working on the scenes. You can't give copies of the scenes to more people than are specified in your license. You can change a few words here or there, particularly if you want to localize the setting of a scene. However you can't re-write a scene. You can edit scenes if they are running too long for your purposes. This might happen if you using the scenes for a showcase, or if you are filming them to go on show reels, and there are time constraints. You can present the scenes for other people to see as long as you aren't making money from this. If you are presenting the scenes for other people and you are making money, then we should be getting a royalty payment. You should talk to us before you do this. If this confuses you, please email us. In fact email us with any questions you might have about the scenes and scenestation and we'll do our best to get back to you ASAP. You can put the scenes on your own internal website for distribution to the people you bought the license for, as long as it's a secure site and other people can't access the scenes from the site. You can't put a copy of the scene up on someone else's website, or other things like that. Generally, scenestation.com is the only place that the scenes should be available from. You must ensure that scenestation.com is acknowledged if any of the scenes are performed for an audience, or if they are used on show-reels. The acknowledgement in programs, on show-reels, etc, should look like this: "Name of Scene" from scenestation.com |