1. The website
The text, layout, structure, design, illustrations, icons, graphics and code on this website are owned by Junetra Study or used under licence, and are protected by copyright and other intellectual property law. The name Junetra Study and our logo are our trademarks whether or not they are registered.
You may read the site, print pages for your own reference and quote short extracts with attribution. You may not copy the site, republish its content, sell it, mirror it, scrape it systematically, or use it to train a machine learning model, without our written permission.
2. Materials we produce for you
Everything we write for a client — worksheets, study guides, lesson notes, summaries, revision packs, academic plans, course outlines, articles, presentation content and any other deliverable — is created by us and, unless the accepted scope says otherwise in writing, the copyright in it remains with Junetra Study.
That may sound restrictive. In practice it means only one thing: we produce work for you to use, not for you to resell.
3. The licence you receive
On full payment, and for as long as you are not in breach of our Terms and Conditions, you receive a licence to use the deliverables prepared for you. The licence is:
- non-exclusive — we may produce similar work for other clients, though never a copy of yours;
- non-transferable — it is yours, not something you can pass on or sell;
- perpetual — it does not expire, and it survives the end of the engagement;
- limited in purpose — to your own personal study, or, for content creation projects, to the internal instructional use described in the scope.
4. What the licence does not permit
Without our written permission you may not:
- resell, licence, rent or otherwise commercialise materials we produced for you;
- republish them publicly, upload them to a study-sharing platform, or post them where they can be downloaded by others;
- redistribute them to a class, a cohort, a company or an institution beyond the internal use agreed in the scope;
- strip our attribution and present the work as produced by someone else;
- use them as training data for a machine learning or generative system;
- submit them, in whole or in substantial part, as your own graded academic work.
The last of those is a matter of academic integrity as much as copyright, and it is also covered in our Terms and Conditions and our Acceptable Use Policy.
5. Buying the rights outright
For Educational Content Creation projects — where an instructor or an organisation needs to own what they commission — a full assignment of copyright is available. It has to be agreed and priced in the written scope before work starts, and it takes effect on full payment. We will not pretend that a standard project fee includes an assignment it does not include, and we will not quietly claim rights over work you paid to own.
6. Our methods, templates and pre-existing material
Our internal frameworks, checklists, planning structures, teaching methods and reusable components remain ours in every case, including where they appear inside a deliverable you commissioned and including where copyright in the deliverable has been assigned to you. You receive a licence to use them as part of the deliverable; you do not acquire the underlying method.
7. Material you send to us
You keep ownership of everything you send us: your notes, your drafts, your syllabus, your source documents, your data. We do not claim any right in them.
You grant us a limited licence to store, copy, annotate and adapt that material for the sole purpose of performing the service you ordered. That licence ends when the engagement ends and our retention periods expire, as described in the Privacy Policy.
8. Your warranty about what you send
By sending us material you confirm that you own it or have the right to send it, that sending it to us does not breach anyone else's copyright, confidentiality obligation, licence or institutional rule, and that it does not contain anything unlawful. If a third party makes a claim against us because of material you supplied, you agree to indemnify us against it.
9. Third-party works and citation
Where our materials quote, cite, paraphrase or refer to a third-party work — a textbook, an article, a dataset, a public source — we do so for study and commentary, we keep quotation within fair limits, and we attribute the source. Referring to a work is not an endorsement of it and does not imply any relationship with its publisher.
When you use our materials in your own work, the obligation to cite correctly, according to the referencing standard your institution requires, is yours. Our summaries are a study aid, not a source you can pass off as your own reading.
10. Trademarks of others
Names of institutions, publishers, platforms, examination boards and products may appear on this site or in our materials. They belong to their respective owners and are used for identification only. Their appearance implies no affiliation with, sponsorship by or endorsement from those owners.
11. Feedback and testimonials
If you send us feedback, a suggestion or a testimonial, you allow us to use it to improve the service and, in the case of a testimonial, to publish it with the attribution you agreed. You will always be asked before a testimonial is published, and you may withdraw it at any time, in which case we remove it from the site.
12. Copyright complaints
If you believe that material on this website, or material we have produced, infringes a copyright you own or represent, tell us. Send a written notice to the email address below containing:
- your name, your organisation and your role in relation to the work;
- identification of the copyrighted work you say has been infringed;
- identification of the material on our site or in our deliverable that you say is infringing, precisely enough for us to find it;
- a statement that you have a good-faith belief that the use is not authorised by the owner, its agent or the law;
- a statement that the information in the notice is accurate, and that you are authorised to act for the owner.
We acknowledge every complete notice within two business days. Where the complaint is well founded, we remove or amend the material promptly. Where we believe the use was lawful, we will say so and explain why, rather than quietly ignoring you.
13. Consequences of infringement
Where a client breaches this policy — most commonly by redistributing or reselling materials — we may revoke the licence, terminate the engagement without refund of work already properly performed, require the material to be taken down, and pursue the remedies available to us in law.
14. Changes
We may update this policy. The date at the top of the page shows when the current version took effect. Changes do not retrospectively alter the licence granted for work already delivered and paid for.
15. Contact
Licensing questions, permission requests and copyright complaints should be sent to the details below, which are provided as plain text.
support@junetrastudy.com
1030 S Broadway, Lexington, KY 40504, USA
+1 208 415 4995