Debit


Debit - authorize the censorship office to distribute the publication. Also permission to import foreign publications (so-called postage or communication debit).

The word comes from the French word débit, meaning "sale", "too", "place of sale". This term is derived from the Latin root debēre ("to be [someone] guilty"), as well as the word debit.

In the Polish press law until 1990, the law defined the deprivation of communication debates as a sanction binding on the prohibition of dissemination of printed matters abroad. According to the press law of 1938, the Ministry of the Interior had been deprived of the debacle, and in 1946 this entitlement went to the Central Office for Press Control, Publications and Spectators. The 1981 law provided for the deprivation of a foreign journal for a period of one to five years if it had been denied a three-time ban on dissemination. The Deactivation Report was published in Monitor Polski. The publication of prohibited foreign publications was allowed for libraries, for purposes justified by their statutory activities, and for institutions and persons for professional or scientific purposes, or with the approval of the Central Office for Publication and the Spectator.

Publishers disseminated without proper permission (so-called underground publications) were referred to as non-bitter (most publishers of such publications never had such permission).

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