Site content — Creative Commons BY 4.0
Except where noted, the original content on onlinejourno.com (articles, documentation and images we created) is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (CC BY 4.0).
You are free to share and adapt this material for any purpose, even commercially, provided you give appropriate credit, link to the license, and indicate if changes were made.
How to attribute:
> “[Title]” by OnlineJourno (onlinejourno.com), licensed under CC BY 4.0.
Quoted and third-party material — fair use / fair dealing
OnlineJourno analyses and references published journalism. Where we quote or excerpt third-party material, we do so under the principles of fair use / fair dealing — limited extracts, for the purposes of reporting, comment, criticism and research, with attribution to the original source. We do not republish others’ work in full, and rights in quoted material remain with the original rights-holders.
If you are a rights-holder with a concern about how your material has been used, contact subhash @ onlinejourno.com and we will respond promptly.
The software
The OnlineJourno platform software is licensed separately — see the LICENSE in the project repository. Bundled fonts (Karnata F Kittel, Source Serif 4, IBM Plex Sans & Mono) are used under the SIL Open Font License 1.1.
Trademarks
“OnlineJourno” and the prism mark are brand assets of OnlineJourno. The CC BY 4.0 license covers content — it does not grant the right to use the marks in a way that implies endorsement.
Last updated: 22 June 2026.
Code & software
The OnlineJourno software is fair-source, under the Functional Source License (FSL-1.1-ALv2). You may read, run, modify and self-host it; the only restriction is reselling it as a competing commercial product. Each release converts to the permissive Apache 2.0 license two years after its publication.
Request access. Ahead of launch, the fair-source repositories are private. If you want to run or adapt a capability — OnlineJourno Newsroom, Galley, Daybook, Lens, The Audit — get in touch and we’ll share access. We’d rather know the newsrooms and builders using it.
Two tools are fully open source (MIT) and public today: the Web Bloat Checker and the Crawl-Budget Analyser — read, fork and run them freely at github.com/onlinejourno.