Address Book definition

Address Book or “PAB” shall mean the electronic database of all Participant Users among whom a Message can be sent and/or from whom a Message can be received, including physicians and other non-physician users of the HIE.
Address Book for the purposes of this policy, is a systematic book or database used for storing entries called contacts. Each contact entry usually consists of a few standard fields, such as the contact name and fax number, and it is used for allowing fax senders to automatically send facsimiles (faxes) from one individual to another individual without having to manually dial the fax number of the intended recipient.

Examples of Address Book in a sentence

  • You assume all responsibility for the actions of its Administrators and other users in creating, adding to, viewing, disclosing, using and modifying CAB Data, including the transfer of such data to all jurisdictions where the Customer may use the Corporate Address Book (“Processing”), including all claims arising under the data protection or privacy laws of any jurisdiction with respect to such transfers.

  • During or following the initial testing period, as described in Section 3.03 above, Participant with provide CRISP with Data or Confidential Information necessary for the Master Patient Index, the Physician Address Book and the Registry, as requested by CRISP.

  • CRISP shall remove a terminated Participant from the Participant Index, its Provider Directory and its Physician Address Book and from CRISP Services.

  • Further, Your Application may not provide an automated mechanism that transfers only the Facebook Data portions of the end-user’s Address Book altogether to a location off of the end-user’s device.

  • At the expiration of the notice period, CRISP will remove Participant from the Participant Index, the Provider Directory and the Physician Address Book and terminate Participant’s and Participant’s Permitted Users’ ability to access and use the HIE or t CRISP Services (except a right to access and use the HIE and/or CRISP Services through a different Participant, if any).

  • For the sake of clarity, this does not prohibit an automated transfer of the user’s entire Address Book as a whole, so long as user notification and consent requirements have been fulfilled; and does not prohibit enabling users to transfer any portion of their Address Book data manually (e.g., by cutting and pasting) or enabling them to individually select particular data items to be transferred.

  • CRISP shall remove a terminated Participant from the Participant Index, it Provider Directory and its Physician Address Book and from CRISP Services.

  • If Your Application accesses data from an end user’s Address Book through the Address Book API, You must notify and obtain consent from the user before a user’s Address Book data is accessed or used by Your Application.

  • At the expiration of the notice period, CRISP will remove Participant from the Participant Index, the Provider Directory and the Physician Address Book and terminate Participant’s and Participant’s Permitted Users’ ability to access and use the HIE or the Direct Service CRISP Services (except a right to access and use the HIE and/or the DirectCRISP Services through a different Participant, if any).

  • During or following the initial testing period, as described in section 3.03 above, Participant will provide CRISP with Data necessary for the Master Patient Index, the Physician Address Book and the Registry, or for an index of insureds or members of Participant’s programs of insurance, as requested by CRISP.