| This agreement is between
The Chancellor, Masters and Scholars of the University of Oxford ("the
University") whose administrative offices are at:
Wellington Square
Oxford OX1 2JD
and any participant in the "climateprediction.net"
experiment (you, The Licensee). For the purposes of this license the University
is acting on behalf of the climateprediction.net experiment ("The
Project") whose aims and work are described below in Note 4.
The University wishes to sincerely acknowledge the valuable work of the
partners who have contributed to this software and to the climateprediction.net
project. These are as follows:
The Met Office
The Open University
The University of Reading
The Rutherford Appleton Laboratory
The University grants you a non-exclusive License to install and run
the following for a period of up to three years following the date of
acceptance of this agreement:
A precompiled executable version of the HadSM3, HadCM3L or HadCM3 climate
models (see Note 1), with associated forcing datasets, for bona fide research
in connection with the Project on condition you accept the following conditions:
1) You accept that your name, e-mail address and machine
details will be stored on a database by The Project but will not be passed
on to any third party.
2) You will either return the results of your experiment
to The Project unaltered or notify The Project that your experiment has
been prematurely terminated, for whatever reason (see Note 2).
3) You will connect to the internet sufficiently frequently
and for sufficient time for the client software to notify the server of
your progress and return results (updates on data transfer requirements
for different experiments will
be posted regularly on the project web site).
4) You will not use this software or data for commercial
exploitation, business use, resale or transfer to any third party.
5) You accept that the data and software have been developed
for the purposes of The Met Office and The Project, that no warranty is
given as to its suitability for use on the Licensee's equipment and that
no liability is accepted by The Met Office or The Project for any errors
or omissions in the data, software or associated information and/or documentation.
6) You accept that the Met Office retains the intellectual
property rights on the climate models HadSM3, HadCM3L, HadCM3 and developments
therefrom, and The Project retains intellectual property rights on software
developed to allow these models to be run securely on personal computers
in a distributed environment, and reserve the right to require acknowledgements
and/or co-authorship in any publication arising out of their use.
7) You accept that you will not add to, modify or transfer
to any third party any part of the software, data files or documentation
provided by the Project (unless instructed to by a representative of the
Project).
8) You accept that your participation in the experiment
is given without restrictions. The Project is under no requirement to
acknowledge any individual participant in published papers or elsewhere
(see Note 3).
9) You will only use this software and data on a computer
system for which you have permission to do so.
10) If any of the above clauses are deemed invalid,
this does not invalidate any other clause.
11) You accept that this License may be terminated without
notice if you are in breach of any of these conditions.
Disclaimer
The University, the Met Office or any of the participants in the Project
are not liable for any damages, being direct, indirect, special or incidental
or loss of profits arising from the use of software or other material
supplied as part of the "climateprediction.net" experiment.
There is no obligation to supply maintenance, support, updates, enhancements
or modifications for software or other material supplied.
Note 1: Regarding the availability of source code. To
ensure the integrity of the climateprediction.net experiment,
this license applies only to precompiled executable versions of the relevant
climate models. The Met Office has a policy of allowing access to the
entire model source code for specific
bona fide research purposes. Any person or persons wishing to access the
model source code (approx. 500,000 lines of Fortran) can make a written
application to The Met Office stating the purpose and likely duration
of
their research. Please see www.metoffice.com for more details.
Note 2: This is very important. Many of these models
will fail, and finding out which these are is a major point of this experiment.
So we need to know if your model fails, for whatever reason: the client
software will notify us automatically if your model does fail provided
you log on to the internet and let it do so. If you simply decide to discontinue,
then the sooner you let us know, the sooner we can get someone else working
on your experiment.
Note 3: Of course we are indebted to and will sincerely
acknowledge participants collectively in any publications arising from
this project, since without you we could not achieve any of this. If and
only if you give us permission to do so, your participant name and the
number of experiments you have successfully contributed will be made available
electronically. When the software is sufficiently developed we hope to
develop a "leader board" on the web site which shows the most
active participants. Unfortunately, acknowledging all the individual participants
explicitly in every journal article arising out of this unique project
would be infeasible in journals and
elsewhere. This is why we need clause 8.
Note 4: The aim of the climateprediction.net
project is to quantify the uncertainties in climate forecasts. This is
to be achieved by creating a massive ensemble of many forecasts made with
slightly differing models which, together, provide an improved estimate
of future climate than could any one simulation. This approach is known
as ensemble forecasting and requires an
enormous amount of computing power and the only practical solution is
to appeal to distributed computing and combine the power of a very large
number of ordinary PCs, each PC tackling one small but key part of the
global problem. The list of contributors to the climateprediction.net
project
can be found by looking at the website of the same name, however major
contributors are listed in the acknowledgement above. In distributing
and supporting the software covered in this license the University is
acting on behalf of these contributors to further the work of the climateprediction.net
project.
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