Acceptable Use Policy

Issued: October 23, 2003

It is ProDoc's policy that in order to receive the benefit of any interactive electronic services provided by ProDoc over the Internet (the "Service"), the owner of a Firm Account or an Individual User Account (as those terms are defined in relevant license agreements) MUST agree to the following terms for Acceptable Usage of the Service:

  1. To comply with all applicable U.S. and state laws, statutes, ordinances, regulations, contracts and applicable licenses regarding your use of the Service.
  2. To warrant that any information that they provide to ProDoc and their activities (including payments) through the Service shall not:
    1. be false, inaccurate or misleading;
    2. be fraudulent;
    3. violate ProDoc's policy;
    4. infringe on any third party's copyright, patent, trademark, trade secret or other property rights or rights of publicity or privacy;
    5. violate any law, statute, ordinance, contract or regulation (including, but not limited to, those governing financial services, consumer protection, unfair competition, anti-discrimination, or false advertising);
    6. be defamatory, trade libelous, unlawfully threatening or unlawfully harassing;
    7. be obscene or contain child pornography;
    8. contain any viruses, Trojan horses, worms, time bombs, cancelbots, easter eggs or other computer programming routines that may damage, detrimentally interfere with, surreptitiously intercept or expropriate any system, data or other personal information; or
    9. create liability for ProDoc or cause ProDoc to lose (in whole or in part) the services of its ISP's or other suppliers.
  3. To refrain from using or attempting to use the Service for purposes other than legitimately filing electronic documents with a government entity intended to be the ultimate recipient of such documents or sending payments and managing their account, including but not limited to tampering, hacking, modifying or otherwise corrupting the security or functionality of the Service; and
  4. To accept responsibility for all damages and other penalties that their actions directly or indirectly give rise to, including acknowledging that such actions, where applicable, may be reported to appropriate authorities for possible criminal prosecution.
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