Web Services Sample Clauses

The Web Services clause defines the terms and conditions under which web-based services are provided or accessed as part of an agreement. It typically outlines the scope of the services, user access rights, and any technical or security requirements that must be met. For example, it may specify how users can interact with the service, data handling protocols, or uptime commitments. The core function of this clause is to set clear expectations and responsibilities regarding the use and provision of web services, thereby minimizing misunderstandings and potential disputes.
POPULAR SAMPLE Copied 1 times
Web Services. E-Verify Employer Agents who verify their clients’ newly hired employees and develop Web Services software, whether for business use, sale, or distribution to others. Web Services software includes any program that provides an interface between the E-Verify browser and a Web Services portal. Note: The Web Services E-Verify Employer Agents who develop Web Services software agree to provide software updates to each client who purchases its software. Because of the frequency Web Services updates, an ongoing relationship between the software developer and the client is necessary. For purposes of this MOU, the E-Verify browser refers to the website that provides direct access to the E-Verify system: ▇▇▇▇▇://▇-▇▇▇▇▇▇.▇▇▇▇▇.▇▇▇/emp/. You may access E-Verify directly free of charge via the E-Verify browser. The Employer is not a party to this MOU; however, this MOU contains a section titled Responsibilities of the Employer. This section is provided to inform Web Services E-Verify Employer Agents acting on behalf of the Employer of the responsibilities and obligations their clients are required to meet. The Employer is bound by these responsibilities through signing a separate MOU during their enrollment as a client of the Web Services E-Verify Employer Agent. The E-Verify program requires an initial agreement between DHS and the Web Services E-Verify Employer Agent as part of the enrollment process. After agreeing to the MOU as set forth herein, completing the tutorial, and obtaining access to E-Verify as a Web Services E-Verify Employer Agent, the Web Services E-Verify Employer Agent will be given an opportunity to add a client once logged into E-Verify. All parties, including the Employer, will then be required to sign and submit a separate MOU to E-Verify. The responsibilities of the parties remain the same in each MOU. Authority for the E-Verify program is found in Title IV, Subtitle A, of the Illegal Immigration Reform and Immigrant Responsibility Act of 1996 (IIRIRA), Pub. L. 104-208, 110 Stat. 3009, as amended (8 U.S.C. § 1324a note). The Federal Acquisition Regulation (FAR) Subpart 22.18, “Employment Eligibility Verification” and Executive Order 12989, as amended, provide authority for Federal contractors and subcontractors (Federal contractor) to use E-Verify to verify the employment eligibility of certain employees working on Federal contracts. Before accessing E-Verify using Web Services, the Web Services E-Verify Employer Agent must meet certain techni...
Web Services. The Contractor shall use Web services exclusively to interface with the Purchasing Entity’s data in near real time.
Web Services. Our Web Services are designed to enable you to easily establish a presence on the Internet. Our Web Hosting and Design is composed of our Web Hosting and Design Publishing Component and other miscellaneous components. These components may be used independently or in conjunction with each other.
Web Services. Annual fees for web services are payable in advance, commencing upon the availability of the service. Your annual fees for the initial term are set forth in the Investment Summary. Upon expiration of the initial term, your annual fees will be at our then-current rates.
Web Services. Hosted Application Terms
Web Services. Seller makes the following elections with regard to having Seller’s property displayed on any Interweb site: (circle YES or NO to all that apply) • Display listing on any Internet site, including social media such as Seller’s Initials Seller’s Initials Date • Allow for automatic valuation tools to be used for Seller’s listing: YES NO • Allow for blogging or comments to be used or made regarding Seller’s listing: YES NO
Web Services. 6.1. Provide and maintain an internet portal for shareholders and registered investment advisers to access and perform various online capabilities on their investment accounts with the Funds.
Web Services. Client has requested, and DST will provide Web Services as one of the FAN Services provided pursuant to the terms of the DST FAN Services Agreement (the “Agreement”) between State Street and DST. Through Web Services, Shareholders may submit Transaction requests to the Fund’s transfer agency system via the Internet as described further in this Service Exhibit.
Web Services. Get the latest headlines and company-specific news in our expanded GUTS section. Apr 26, 2005 04:53:45 PM 10 of 40 The WS-I offers a sort of Web services seal of approval, providing certification that Web services adhere to standards put out by other standards organizations, such as the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C), the Organization for the Advancement of Structured Information Standards (OASIS) or the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF). Last year, the group, whose members include both technology companies and customers, released a "basic profile," a set of tests and sample applications to measure whether Web services products from different providers are interoperable. Later this summer, it will publish a security profile advising how to effectively work with a number of Web services-related security standards, WS-I executives told CNET ▇▇▇▇.▇▇▇. Getting the message Once the security profile is complete, the WS-I expects to take on reliable messaging, an important technology for the use of Web services as a replacement for proprietary integration software. While there was a good deal of agreement in the first phase of basic Web services protocols, there is a significant rift between backers of different reliable messaging proposals, pitting IBM, Microsoft, BEA Systems and their technical partners against Oracle, Sun Microsystems, Hitachi and others. The rivalry among two reliable messaging specifications is so intense that one software executive decried IBM's "assassination attempt" of the Web services Reliable Messaging spec (WS-RM), which is now being developed through the standards body OASIS. An IBM executive had provided a technical critique of that specification in a meeting at the end of April. IBM, Microsoft, BEA and Tibco are backing an alternate proposal, which has not been submitted to a standards body. The WS-I plans to convince the dueling groups to eventually merge the work from the technical committees, said ▇▇▇ ▇▇▇▇▇▇, an IBM executive and the chairman of the WS-I board. "There's an agreement that we need to do a reliable messaging profile. That's placing pressure of some form on people who are supporting various proposals to come together and find agreement," ▇▇▇▇▇▇ said. Too many cooks, too soon Other conflicts, born of parallel standardization efforts, also need resolution. Earlier this month, executives from 11 technology companies sent an open letter to the W3C requesting that an advisory committee be formed to find "convergenc...
Web Services. The Contractor shall use Web services exclusively to interface with the City’s data in near real time when possible.