Sources
83 sources in the catalog, triaged by content-reuse licence (83 done) — openmeans we may extract & store the content, restricted means link-only, unknown means no clear signal was found. Filter by area or licence.
2 of 83 sources (filtered · clear)
- ImmigrationToolsUnknown
Can I vote
Tool to find out if people can vote in UK elections
Just Register / Citizens UK / Migrant Democracy Project ↗Licence: none foundevidence ↗Why this verdict?
Can I Vote? is a UK voter-eligibility tool run jointly by Citizens UK, the Migrant Democracy Project, and Just Register. The XML sitemap (page-sitemap.xml) enumerates the entire site as just four pages — home, /privacy-policy/, /results-vote-check/, and /faqs/ — so coverage here is effectively complete. None of these pages carries any copyright notice (no © symbol, no "all rights reserved"), Creative Commons badge, or content-reuse statement; the homepage footer links only to Privacy Policy, FAQs, About Just Register, and Donate. Candidate licence/terms paths (/terms, /terms-of-use, /license, /copyright, /legal, /about) all return HTTP 404, the actual resource page (/faqs/, the substantive guidance content) states no per-item licence, and the only legal document on the site — the privacy policy — is silent on copyright, IP, or reuse. A targeted web search for the site's licence terms returned nothing site-specific. With no permission granted (so not "open") and yet no explicit all-rights-reserved assertion either, plus the practical reality that the content likely embeds UK electoral/government eligibility material whose rights sit elsewhere, the conservative verdict is unknown. Caveat: assessment is site-wide; no per-resource licence exists, and absence of a notice does not imply reuse permission — under UK law content is copyright by default even without a notice.
- ImmigrationValidated professional servicesUnknown
Services menu
Services by a migrant-led design agency
Migrants in Culture ↗Licence: none foundevidence ↗Why this verdict?
After a full investigation there is no content-reuse signal of any kind on migrantsinculture.com (a Squarespace-hosted UK arts/activism site). The homepage footer has no copyright notice, Creative Commons badge, or licence text; every standard legal page (/terms, /terms-of-use, /privacy, /legal, /copyright, /about) returns 404, and the sitemap confirms no terms/legal page exists anywhere. The actual content-bearing pages (/resources, /saturdayschoolresources, /posterbank, /research-and-strategic-projects) carry no per-item licence, CC link, or "free to use/share/adapt" statement, and a raw-HTML check found no creativecommons.org link (the only "license" string is Squarespace's internal data-licensed-asset-preview attribute, unrelated to reuse). A web search surfaced no site-specific reuse terms. Because there is neither an open-licence grant nor an explicit all-rights-reserved notice, the result is genuinely unknown. Caveats: this is a site-wide assessment with no per-resource grants found; many listed resources are third-party (e.g. the SKNB workbook hosted at sknb.org, Design Justice Network zines, named-author books), whose rights are separate; and under UK law content is copyright by default absent any licence, so extraction/storage should not be assumed permitted without contacting hello@migrantsinculture.com. Triage only, not legal advice.