- The individuals or teams participating the iCampus Prize competition must be led by a currently registered MIT undergraduate or graduate student, and this MIT undergraduate or graduate student should be listed as the main contact for the submission.
- By participating in the competition, you acknowledge that the Office of Digital Learning will post a copy of your materials (e.g., submission documents, storyboards, videos, etc.) under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license to the competition website.
- If applicable, software submissions to the iCampus Prize competition must be available under an appropriate open license that enables the results to be broadly disseminated, without restriction, in the tradition of open academic research. The license must be a recognized open source license that enables MIT to use and build upon the submission as submitted to the competition royalty-free. This requirement is not designed to preclude the winner(s) from continuing development on the project or even commercializing it. (See http://www.opensource.org/licenses/index.html for a listing of licenses.)
- If applicable, the Office of Digital Learning, on behalf of MIT, must be able to configure a server to run any software or web application submitted to the iCampus Prize competition. Any software submission should use generally available Web, database and/or software to facilitate support and maintenance of the submission.