unlicenced उदाहरण वाक्य
उदाहरण वाक्य
- Its depiction in this derivative work is unlicenced, but its use to illustrate related articles on Wikipedia is believed to be fair use under U . S . copyright law:
- This is from both a legal viewpoint ( unlicenced software ) and to try and stop the risk of viruses or other system problems that may cause problems for the IT Staff.
- Unlicenced offshore commercial stations have operated off the coasts of Belgium, Denmark, Israel, The Netherlands, New Zealand, Sweden, The United Kingdom, Yugoslavia and the United States.
- The introduction of MMDS proved controversial for a time in some rural areas which were accustomed to receiving multichannel services more cheaply via unlicenced UHF relay " deflector " or " rebeaming " systems.
- In other words, if it allows one user to " get away " with using the trademark in an unlicenced manner, then it, by default, cannot then stop anyone else from using it.
- Most offshore broadcast is usually associated with European unlicenced radio stations; the trend never caught on as much in the United States as most organizations that could afford an offshore broadcasting boat would instead buy a legal station.
- In the operation from 8pm to 10pm, a five-member team headed by Assistant Superintendant of Police Jaafar Mat checked the condominiums in the area following a tip-off that security services there were operated by unlicenced agencies.
- I've long been opposed to us having galleries of unlicenced images, see my post here, for example : but I don't think the case with the sports team logos is as clear as you imply.
- :Just to answer your first question before I head off to bed ( getting late here ) as to why Disney would raise a stink about the unlicenced use of its characters in a public bathroom, see Trademark dilution and Genericized trademark.
- However, the majority of offshore broadcasters have been unlicenced stations using seaborne broadcasting as a means to circumvent national broadcasting regulations, for example the practice has been used by broadcasting organizations like the Voice of America as a means of circumventing national broadcasting regulations of other nations.