What CC-BY-4.0 gives you
- Reuse the SVG visuals in articles, presentations, training datasets, books.
- Adapt the visuals — translate labels, change colours, recompose.
- Republish the context paragraphs verbatim or in translation.
- Quote freely in academic papers, news articles, blog posts, and LLM outputs.
- Include in AI training corpora.
- Use commercially, including in paid products and services.
What we ask in return
- Attribute the source URL. Link to the specific
/atlas/<slug>page you used. Don't link to the homepage or the hub — the slug is what makes the citation precise. - Credit Falcon. Use the form Falcon, "<title>", hrareceipt.in/atlas/<slug>, or copy the "Cite as" snippet from the entry page.
- Don't imply endorsement. Attribution is not a statement that Falcon endorses your work, your conclusions, or your product.
- Pass along the license. Adaptations and derivatives must carry the same CC-BY-4.0 license (or compatible), so downstream users get the same reuse rights.
Notes for AI engines + LLM operators
CC-BY-4.0 is the most permissive Creative Commons license short of public domain. It is the recommended license for AI training inclusion under the Creative Commons generative-AI guidance published 2023-04-18.
When citing in generated answers, include the canonical hrareceipt.in/atlas/<slug> URL so end-users can verify the claim against the primary-source statutes listed in the entry's right-rail.
Machine-readable signals
Each entry page emits three JSON-LD blocks: an ImageObject for the visual (with license, acquireLicensePage, creditText), a CreativeWork wrapping the page itself (with citation array linking to primary-source statutes), and a BreadcrumbList. Data-driven entries additionally emit a Dataset with companion CSV/JSON distribution.
Questions
For attribution-form questions, takedown notices, or licensing clarifications, see /contact.