EXHIBIT A – Oracle Service Registry Restricted Use Notice

Oracle Service Registry is an optional component for Application Integration Architecture (AIA) Foundation Packs and/or Process Integration Packs. You can install and use AIA products without Oracle Service Registry. However, if a customer wants to use Oracle Service Registry to manage only AIA objects and services at runtime, a restricted-use license of Oracle Service Registry is included.

The restricted-use license of Oracle Service Registry allows customers to view/edit objects and services included with AIA products. If a customer wants to use Oracle Service Registry to manage other content than standard out-of-the-box AIA content, the purchase of a full-use license of Oracle Service Registry is required.

Restricted-use license of Oracle Service Registry for AIA is limited to the following:

1. Viewing and consuming Oracle AIA content (Oracle intellectual property) available with their licensed AIA Foundation Pack and/or Process Integration Packs. The pre-built AIA content includes: Services/Binding Templates (WSDL), Schemas (XSD) and Transforms (XSLT/XQUERY);

2. Making limited modifications and extensions to the AIA content only in accordance with the AIA extension mechanism, and not for other purposes:

i. Adding custom attributes to the AIA schemas

ii. Adding corresponding transforms for the custom attributes

iii. Modifying out-of-the-box AIA services taxonomy/categorization

iv. Modifying out-of-the-box AIA endpoint binding templates

v. Adding new taxonomies or models to categorize (1) the out-of-the-box and (2) the extended Oracle AIA contentAny of the following conditions would trigger the full-use license of Oracle Service Registry with AIA:

i. Adding custom business services

ii. Adding new operation to an existing service

iii. Registering your own in-house services

iv. Adding new taxonomies or models to categorize customer specific content (from 1, 2, 3 above)

v. Modifying attributes and other metadata in Oracle Service Registry other than through the AIA extension mechanism