DMCA Copyright Policy
Speed Up Science 2.0 respects the intellectual property rights of authors, educators, creators, publishers and other copyright owners. This policy explains how copyright owners or their authorised representatives may report material that they believe infringes their protected work.
Last updated: July 13, 2026Our commitment to copyright
Speed Up Science 2.0 publishes educational material related to Mathematics, Physics, Chemistry and Biology. We make reasonable efforts to use original, licensed, appropriately credited or legally permitted content. We do not knowingly publish material that unlawfully infringes the copyright of another person or organisation.
Respect for creators
We recognise that educational articles, illustrations, photographs, videos, worksheets and other creative works may be protected by copyright.
Responsible review
Copyright complaints containing sufficient information will be reviewed carefully and in good faith.
Appropriate action
When a valid complaint is confirmed, the relevant material may be removed, restricted, replaced or corrected as appropriate.
Before submitting a copyright complaint
Please make sure that you are the copyright owner or are legally authorised to act for the copyright owner. Consider whether the disputed use may be licensed, permitted by law or covered by an applicable copyright exception before sending a notice.
Information required in a DMCA notice
To help us identify and review the complaint, your written notification should contain all of the following information:
Clearly describe the original work that you believe has been infringed. Where available, include the original publication URL, title, registration information or other supporting evidence.
Provide the complete URL of each Speed Up Science 2.0 page containing the material you want reviewed. General homepage links or incomplete descriptions may not be sufficient to locate the content.
Include your full name, organisation where applicable, mailing address, telephone number and a working email address.
State that you have a good-faith belief that the disputed use is not authorised by the copyright owner, the copyright owner's agent or the law.
State that the information in the notice is accurate and, under penalty of perjury, that you are the copyright owner or are authorised to act on behalf of the copyright owner.
Add the physical or electronic signature of the copyright owner or the person authorised to act on the copyright owner's behalf.
Submit your notice
Send the complete copyright notice through our Contact Us page. Use the subject or opening line “DMCA Copyright Notice” and include all required details in one message.
Open Contact Us PageHow we handle a complaint
After receiving a sufficiently detailed notice, we may review the identified page, examine the information provided, request clarification or temporarily restrict access to the disputed material while the matter is assessed.
When appropriate, we may remove or modify the material and may notify the person responsible for submitting or publishing it. A response time cannot be guaranteed because each complaint may require a different level of review.
Submitting a notice does not guarantee removal. Material may remain available when the complaint is incomplete, cannot be verified or when the use appears authorised or otherwise permitted by applicable law.
Counter-notification
If content you supplied has been removed because of a copyright complaint and you believe the removal resulted from a mistake or misidentification, you may submit a counter-notification.
A counter-notification should identify the removed material and its previous location, include your physical or electronic signature, provide your name, address and telephone number, and contain the legally required good-faith, jurisdiction and service-of-process statements applicable to a DMCA counter-notification.
Because a counter-notification is a formal legal statement, you should consider obtaining independent legal advice before submitting one.
Third-party platforms
Speed Up Science 2.0 is hosted using Blogger, a Google service. A copyright owner may also use Google’s official legal reporting process to submit a copyright complaint concerning content hosted on Blogger. Complaints submitted to Google are handled under Google’s own procedures and policies.
This policy provides general information about our copyright complaint process and does not constitute legal advice.
Frequently asked questions
What is a DMCA copyright notice?
A DMCA copyright notice is a formal request from a copyright owner or authorised representative asking an online service to remove or restrict access to material believed to infringe a copyright-protected work.
Who may submit a copyright complaint?
A complaint should be submitted by the copyright owner or by a person legally authorised to act on the copyright owner's behalf.
What information should a DMCA notice include?
It should identify the copyrighted work and disputed material, provide exact page URLs and contact information, include the required good-faith and accuracy statements, and contain a physical or electronic signature.
Will every copyright complaint result in removal?
No. Each complaint is reviewed individually. Material may not be removed when a notice is incomplete, cannot be verified or when the use appears authorised or legally permitted.
Can removed material be challenged?
A person whose material was removed may be able to submit a formal counter-notification when they believe the removal resulted from a mistake or misidentification.

0 Comments
Thanks, for your lovely comment!!