Copyright and License
Copyright
Published original scholarly works may be freely saved, copied, and used in electronic form, provided that they are reproduced without modification and with proper reference to the source. Such use must not serve commercial purposes and is permitted exclusively for personal use. The author or co-authors are obliged to notify the publisher regarding any secondary publication of the work, whether in its original language or in translation. In any secondary publication venue, the author(s) are required to indicate the full bibliographic details of the original publication.
Copyright is jointly held by the publisher and the author, in such a way that moral rights remain with the author, while economic rights are vested in the publisher.
License
The electronic version of the journal is published under the terms of the CC BY-NC 4.0 license (Creative Commons Attribution–NonCommercial 4.0 International). The author transfers the usage rights to the publisher; however, the journal’s publisher grants authors, free of charge and without time limitation, the right to make their articles’ author-accepted manuscripts (i.e., the pre-print version, as accepted by the editorial office but not yet in final form) publicly available. This right includes free dissemination of the manuscript via email, on the author’s or their institution’s website, or in the openly accessible repository of the author’s university. In all such cases, the author must clearly indicate that the published manuscript is not the final, published version of the work. If the final version of the article has already appeared online or in print, the author must also provide the exact bibliographic details of the journal publication.
Issues of distribution and usage are governed by Act LXXVI of 1999 on Copyright and related legislation.