- 2 minutes read

Guest articles are welcome!

You just have to follow a few simple rules:

  • It has to be your article. You must be the owner of the copyright.
  • Every image and every source code of your article must be published unter a licence compatible to the Creative Commons license of BeyondJava.net.
  • The entire blog (including your guest article) is published under an Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Germany License.
    Creative Commons License
  • BeyondJava.net insists on high-quality content. I won't accept advertising, clickbait or any other article that doesn't meet my quality standards. In the past, I've been offered countless articles that were obviously worthless. Usually I don't even answer to these emails. I don't see a point in feeding the trolls. If you're not a troll, you're welcome!
  • For example, I refuse to accept top-ten lists. With few exceptions, such lists are clickbait.
  • Don't send me an article in broken English. I insist on well-written texts, preferably using American spelling. In any case, I'm going to proof-read your article, and more likely than not, I'm going to edit it.
  • Your article should have something to do with programming. Most of my revolve around Java, JavaScript, and the rest of the JVM ecosystem. But I'm also interested in UX design, design thinking, cloud computing, and agile development.
  • I don't like product comparisons because I don't want to be sued by a lawyer. So if you compare products, it must be a fair and comprehensive comparison. As long as you stick to open source and ignore commercial products, you're on the safe side.

That's a long list. But I assume you agree that's not demanding to much. If you're still interested, drop me an email.

Oh, just one more thing: before publishing foreign content I always run a plagiarism check.


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