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MDN's mission is simple: to provide developers with the information they need to easily build projects on the open Web. If it's an open technology exposed to the Web, we want to document it.
If you're not sure whether a particular topic should be covered on MDN, read: Does this belong on MDN?
You don't need to be able to code—or to write well—in order to be able to help MDN! We have lots of ways you can help, from reviewing articles to be sure they make sense, to contributing text, to adding sample code. In fact, there are so many ways to help that we have a Getting Started page that helps you pick tasks to do, based on your interests and how much time you have to spare!
You can also help by promoting MDN on your own blog or website.
Our community is a global one! We have amazing contributors all around the world, in a number of languages. If you'd like to learn more about us, or if you need help of any kind with MDN, feel free to check out our discussion forum or IRC channel! You can also keep up with what we're up to by following our Twitter account, @MozDevNet. You can also send tweets our way if you see something wrong or if you'd like to offer feedback (or great big thank yous) to our writers and contributors!
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Copyrights and licenses
MDN's content is entirely available under various open source licenses. This section covers the types of content we provide and what licenses are in effect for each.
Documentation and articles
MDN wiki documents have been prepared with the contributions of many authors, both within and outside the Mozilla Foundation. Unless otherwise indicated, the content is available under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike license (CC-BY-SA), v2.5 or any later version. Please attribute "Mozilla Contributors" and include a hyperlink (online) or URL (in print) to the specific wiki page for the content being sourced. For example, to provide attribution for this article, you can write:
Code samples added on or after August 20, 2010 are in the public domain (CC0). No licensing notice is necessary, but if you need one, you can use: "Any copyright is dedicated to the Public Domain. http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/".
If you wish to contribute to this wiki, you must make your documentation available under the Attribution-ShareAlike license (or occasionally an alternative license already specified by the page you are editing), and your code samples available under Creative Commons CC-0 (a Public Domain dedication). Adding to this wiki means you agree that your contributions will be made available under those licenses.
Some older content was made available under a license other than the licenses noted above; these are indicated at the bottom of each page by way of an Alternate License Block.
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Linking to MDN
See this article for guidance on linking to MDN for best practices when linking.
The MDN Web Docs (previously Mozilla Developer Network (MDN), previously Mozilla Developer Center (MDC), a.k.a. Devmo) project started in early 2005, when the Mozilla Foundation obtained a license from AOL to use the original Netscape DevEdge content. The DevEdge content was mined for still-useful material, which was then migrated by volunteers into this wiki so it would be easier to update and maintain.
You can find more history of MDN on our 10th anniversary celebration page, including an oral history by some of the people who were involved.
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