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Copyright Information on My How-To Articles Phil Agre

Over the last several years I have circulated a series of how-to articles on the Internet. These include:

* Advice for undergraduates considering graduate school The art of getting help Designing effective action alerts for the Internet Hosting a speaker How to be a leader in your field How to help someone use a computer How to run an online newsletter* Starting a filter list

I wrote these articles because the world is full of practical social skills. Nobody is born with these skills, they are rarely taught, and unequal access to them is an unnecessary force for inequality. Even though I own the copyright to each of these articles, you are more than welcome to republish them. I only ask the following:

* You can create hyperlinks to them for any purpose without asking permission, but please do not make your own Web pages out of the text.* You can circulate them electronically for any noncommercial purpose, so long as you acknowledge my copyright.* You can print copies on a nonprofit basis for the students in any school, university, or training class.* You can also reprint them in any print publication, provided that you: (a) inform me in advance so I'm not surprised, (b) credit me as the author, (c) acknowledge my copyright (a simple "copyright 2001 by Philip E. Agre" will suffice), (d) reprint each article in its entirety, verbatim, without any additions, deletions, and modifications, and (e) send me one copy of the publication at the address listed on my home page. I would also ask that you mention the URL of my home page , but this is not required.

If you would like to use any of the articles in another way beyond the options I have mentioned, please contact me at pagre@ucla.edu and we can talk about it.

The following articles are not included in the above conditions:

* Building an Internet culture. The copyright to this article is owned by Elsevier, which published it in its journal Telematics and Informatics.* Designing genres for new media. The copyright to this article is owned by Sage, which published a version of it in Steve Jones, ed, CyberSociety 2.0: Revisiting CMC and Community, Sage, 1998. An earlier version appeared in The Network Observer 2(7) and 2(11), 1995.* Networking on the network, which has gotten so long that I haven't decided what to do about publishing it.

Thanks very much.