Cisco Cisco MediaSense Release 9.1(1) Licensing Information

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             Open Source Used In Cisco MediaSense 11.5(1)                                                                                                                                    407
regulations (and the export control laws and regulation of any other countries) when You use, distribute or otherwise
make available any Covered Software.
 
10. RESPONSIBILITY FOR CLAIMS.
 
As between Initial Developer and the Contributors, each party is responsible for claims and damages arising,
directly or indirectly, out of its utilization of rights under this License and You agree to work with Initial Developer
and Contributors to distribute such responsibility on an equitable basis. Nothing herein is intended or shall be
deemed to constitute any admission of liability.
 
NOTICE PURSUANT TO SECTION 9 OF THE COMMON DEVELOPMENT AND DISTRIBUTION LICENSE
(CDDL)
The GlassFish code released under the CDDL shall be governed by the laws of the State of California (excluding
conflict-of-law provisions). Any litigation relating to this License shall be subject to the jurisdiction of the Federal
Courts of the Northern District of California and the state courts of the State of California, with venue lying in Santa
Clara County, California.
 
 
 
 
SOFTWARE RIGHTS
 
ANTLR 1989-2006 Developed by Terence Parr
Partially supported by University of San Francisco & jGuru.com
 
We reserve no legal rights to the ANTLR--it is fully in the
public domain. An individual or company may do whatever
they wish with source code distributed with ANTLR or the
code generated by ANTLR, including the incorporation of
ANTLR, or its output, into commerical software.
 
We encourage users to develop software with ANTLR. However,
we do ask that credit is given to us for developing
ANTLR. By "credit", we mean that if you use ANTLR or
incorporate any source code into one of your programs
(commercial product, research project, or otherwise) that
you acknowledge this fact somewhere in the documentation,
research report, etc... If you like ANTLR and have
developed a nice tool with the output, please mention that
you developed it using ANTLR. In addition, we ask that the
headers remain intact in our source code. As long as these
guidelines are kept, we expect to continue enhancing this
system and expect to make other tools available as they are
completed.
 
The primary ANTLR guy:
 
Terence Parr