Terms of Use

Last updated: 1 May 2026

Digital Infrastructure Explained is an educational reference site about the systems layer behind modern digital services. It explains infrastructure concepts such as cloud regions, data centers, internet routing, peering, CDNs, replication, latency, reliability, observability, and operational trade-offs.

This site is published as a division of WRS Web Solutions Inc. Articles are written under the editorial pen name E. Sandwell.

By using this website, you agree to these terms. If you do not agree with these terms, you should not use this website.

Educational information only

Content on this site is provided for general educational reading. It is intended to help readers understand infrastructure concepts in plain language. It is not a substitute for professional assessment, implementation, design review, procurement review, legal advice, financial advice, security advice, or engineering services.

Real infrastructure decisions depend on specific requirements, budgets, contracts, risk tolerance, compliance duties, staffing, geography, traffic patterns, and operational constraints. You should verify information and consult qualified professionals before making decisions that could affect production systems, business operations, legal obligations, safety, security, or finances.

No professional relationship

Reading this site, using the information on this site, or contacting the publisher does not create a professional, consulting, engineering, advisory, legal, financial, or support relationship with Digital Infrastructure Explained, E. Sandwell, or WRS Web Solutions Inc.

Content provided as-is

The information on this site is provided “as is” and “as available.” We aim to provide clear and useful explanations, but we do not guarantee that all information will always be complete, current, error-free, or suitable for a specific use.

Technology changes over time. Infrastructure terminology, platform behaviour, service designs, and common practices may change after a page is published or updated.

Accuracy, updates, and corrections

We may update, revise, correct, remove, or reorganize content at any time. Updates may be made to improve clarity, correct errors, add context, update terminology, or reflect meaningful changes in infrastructure concepts or practices.

If you believe a page contains a factual error or unclear explanation, please use the Contact page to submit a correction request.

Advertising and third-party services

This site may display advertising, including advertising served by Google AdSense or similar services. Advertising does not mean that Digital Infrastructure Explained endorses a product, service, company, or claim shown in an advertisement.

Third-party services may use cookies or similar technologies. More information is available in the Privacy Policy.

External links

This site may link to third-party websites, documentation, references, tools, or related publications. These links are provided for convenience or context. We do not control external websites and are not responsible for their content, accuracy, availability, privacy practices, or terms.

Acceptable use

You may use this site for ordinary reading, research, and educational purposes. You may not use this site in a way that attempts to damage, overload, disrupt, scrape at unreasonable volume, interfere with, or gain unauthorized access to the website, hosting environment, advertising systems, or related services.

Copyright and reuse

Unless otherwise stated, the text, structure, branding, and original page content on this site are protected by copyright and other applicable rights. You may link to pages on this site using normal web links.

You may quote short excerpts for ordinary reference, commentary, or educational discussion when appropriate credit is given. Large-scale copying, republication, automated reuse, or redistribution of site content without permission is not allowed.

Changes to these terms

These terms may be updated from time to time. The “Last updated” date near the top of this page shows the latest revision date. Continued use of the site after changes means you accept the updated terms.

Contact

For factual correction requests, editorial questions, or other site-related contact, please use the Contact page.

International use

Digital Infrastructure Explained is written for an international English-language audience. Laws, professional requirements, infrastructure practices, service availability, technical standards, and privacy rights can vary by country or region. Readers should consider local requirements and qualified local advice where relevant.