Infocalypse Terms and Conditions of Publication

See the last entry for web only work.

Infocalypse is a quarterly electronic magazine. It is laid out as an A4 print magazine in signatures, and is published as a PDF.

By accepting publication in Infocalypse, contributors agree to the following terms:

Original Work

You confirm that the submitted work is your own original creation and that you hold the rights necessary to grant publication.

Publication Rights

By accepting publication, you grant Infocalypse the non-exclusive right to publish, reproduce, distribute, and archive your work as part of the issue in which it appears.

Copyright remains with the author at all times.

Infocalypse retains the right to continue displaying, distributing, and archiving the published issue in which the work originally appeared.

Changes and Editing

Infocalypse uses Canadian spelling and conventions. Minor copy-editing, formatting, and typographical corrections may be made. Substantive editorial changes will not be made without the author's approval.

Published Issues

Infocalypse is conceived as a complete artistic work. Each issue is curated, with attention given not only to the individual contributions but also to their sequencing, design, typography, visual presentation, and thematic relationships.

The pages of the magazine are interdependent, and designed in spreads. Published issues are final, and individual contributions can not be removed after publication.

Subsequent Publication

Authors are welcome to republish their work elsewhere following publication in Infocalypse. We ask that subsequent publications acknowledge first publication in Infocalypse.

Website Features

In addition to the quarterly magazine, Infocalypse Press posts reviews and featured work.

Web content (including reviews, interviews, featured artists, featured writers, poem of the week) is published independently of the quarterly magazine.

Authors of web content have the same rights and responsibilities as those who are printed in the magazine. The main difference is that web content is not posted as interconnected objects and can be modified at the author's discretion.