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lifestreams : copyright information

All of the material published on this site is the result of personal experience, study and research and its written expression is the intellectual property of Christopher Wynter, Fiona Tulk and others (including forum members) who have worked with us.

All rights to our personal expression as the material presented on this site are reserved to Transpersonal LifeStreams and the authors -- and provided to you provided to you pursuant to section 49 of the Copyright Act 1968 (Commonwealth of Australia).

No material from this site may be either copied for sale or used within any publication, program or course of instruction for sale or for which a fee is charged, without written permission from either Christopher Wynter or Fiona Tulk

Provided you acknowledge the source of the material you use, clearly and obviously on all reproductions, any material contained within these pages may be copied or shared freely for "not for sale" personal use only.

The layout, code, images, color schemes of this website are also the intellectual property of Christopher Wynter and Transpersonal LifeStreams, Hobart, Tasmania


Commonwealth of Australia
prescribed form of notice - 39a and 104b of the Copyright Act 1968
reproduction of works and the copying of public editions

Copyright owners are entitled to take legal action against persons who infringe their copyright. A reproduction of material that is protected by copyright may be a copyright infringement. Certain dealings with copyright will not constitute an infringement, including:

  1. A reproduction that is a fair dealing under the Copyright Act 1968 (the Act), including a fair dealing for the purposes of research or study; or
  2. A reproduction that is authorised by the copyright owner.

It is a fair dealing to make a reproduction for the purposes of research or study, of one or more articles on the same subject in a periodical publication, or, in the case of any other work, of a reasonable portion of a work.

In the case of a published work in electronic form only, a reasonable portion is not more than, in the aggregate, ten per cent of the number of words in the individual article.

More extensive reproduction may constitute fair dealing. To determine whether it does, it is necessary to have regard to the criteria set out in subsection 40 (2) of the Act.

A court may impose penalties and award damages in relation to offences and infringements relating to copyright material.

Higher penalties may apply, and higher damages may be awarded, for offences and infringements involving the conversion of material into digital or electronic form.