Service Specific Terms

Effective starting: March 10, 2015

Your use of a particular Service is subject to the terms of the SOLITEC Customer Agreement (the “Agreement”) as well as the following corresponding additional terms. Any capitalized terms used but not defined below have the meanings in the Agreement.

GCS-specific Terms

1. Repositories. Data that you upload to GCS are stored in “repositories.” You designate whether the repositories are public (meaning that access to those repositories will be limited to those who have permission to access the repositories) or private (meaning that access to those repositories will be limited to you only).

2. Storage Rules. We do not set pre-defined storage limits on Your Data in GCS. However, we do enforce parameters described in the GCS documentation to ensure that you do not use GCS in a way that consumes a disproportionate amount of system resources (CPU’s, memory, disk space, bandwidth, etc.) or that would adversely impact the performance or operation of GCS for other GCS users. Please note that, since we do not maintain access to your repositories, any removal of Your Data under Section 7.8 (Removals and Suspension) of the Agreement means removal of the entire repository in which the offending data resides, not just the offending portions.

3. Accessing Repositories. If you are accessing Data in someone else’s repository, you should carefully read all the information applicable to that repository before using any data. YOU ACKNOWLEDGE THAT ALL DATA MADE AVAILABLE THROUGH GCS IS THE RESPONSIBILITY OF THE ACCOUNT OWNER CONTROLLING THE PARTICULAR REPOSITORY. SOLITEC IS NOT THE PROVIDER OF ANY DATA MADE AVAILABLE THROUGH GCS AND TAKES NO RESPONSIBILITY FOR SUCH DATA.

4. Granting Permissions. Be careful about granting permissions to your repositories. Once you grant such permissions, we will not be able to prevent those users from taking the actions allowed under those permissions, even if you don’t approve of those actions. Be especially careful about granting administrative access to your repositories, as some of those actions may be irreversible. For example, if you grant someone permission that allows them to move data in your repository to another account, we will not be able to reach into that other user’s account without their permission to recover the data, as we are not in a position to arbitrate disputes among our users. In that case, your only recourse may be requesting a takedown under our policy regarding Reporting Copyright and Trademark Violations or pursuing legal action against the other user directly.