Copyright (c) 1994, 1995. All rights reserved. Mic Bowman of Transarc Corporation. Peter Danzig of the University of Southern California. Darren R. Hardy of the University of Colorado at Boulder. Udi Manber of the University of Arizona. Michael F. Schwartz of the University of Colorado at Boulder. Duane Wessels of the University of Colorado at Boulder. This copyright notice applies to all code in Harvest other than subsystems developed elsewhere, which contain other copyright notices in their source text. The Harvest software was developed by the Internet Research Task Force Research Group on Resource Discovery (IRTF-RD). The Harvest software may be used for academic, research, government, and internal business purposes without charge. If you wish to sell or distribute the Harvest software to commercial clients or partners, you must license the software. See http://harvest.cs.colorado.edu/harvest/copyright,licensing.html#licensing. The Harvest software is provided ``as is'', without express or implied warranty, and with no support nor obligation to assist in its use, correction, modification or enhancement. We assume no liability with respect to the infringement of copyrights, trade secrets, or any patents, and are not responsible for consequential damages. Proper use of the Harvest software is entirely the responsibility of the user. For those who are using Harvest for non-commercial purposes, you may make derivative works, subject to the following constraints: - You must include the above copyright notice and these accompanying paragraphs in all forms of derivative works, and any documentation and other materials related to such distribution and use acknowledge that the software was developed at the above institutions. - You must notify IRTF-RD regarding your distribution of the derivative work. - You must clearly notify users that your are distributing a modified version and not the original Harvest software. - Any derivative product is also subject to the restrictions of the copyright, including distribution and use limitations.