YouTube Shorts Competition Terms and Conditions
Submission Guidelines
- Submissions close 01/10/2025
- Groups are up to 3 people in size and can submit multiple shorts
- Groups are made up of only Mission Control Members
- The short is a maximum of 60 seconds in length
- Video must be vertical (ideally using 9:16 aspect ratio)
Content Guidelines
- Content is related to space and educational
- Content must be original and created by the group
- Submissions must be appropriate for all audiences
- Content follows UWA's Social media Policy
- Content follows YouTube's Community Guidelines
Terms and Conditions
Content Rights
- By entering, the group grants the International Space Centre a non-exclusive, royalty-free license to use, reproduce, edit and display the submitted content for promotional and marketing purposes in relation to the competition.
- The group retains ownership of the video.
- Entries that do not comply with YouTube’s Community Guidelines, these Terms and Conditions may be disqualified.
- Plagiarism or use of copyrighted material without permission will result in disqualification.
- Manipulation of video analytics (view/like/comment botting) will result in disqualification.
- The International Space Centre is not responsible for lost, late, or misdirected entries.
- Participation is at the groups own risk. The International Space Centre is not liable for any damages, losses, or expenses arising out of participation.
- Participant contact information will only be used to administer the competition.
- Your personal data will not be sold or shared with third parties.
- The International Space Centre reserves the right to modify, suspend, or cancel the competition at any time due to unforeseen circumstances.
Funding gives plants in space a growth boost
UWA is one of three Australian universities to receive part of almost $3 million (£1.5M) in funding from the UK Space Agency’s International Bilateral Fund through the lead agent on the project, Vertical Future.
Read on UWA ImpactPlants in space research gets funding boost
The University of Western Australia is one of five Australian universities to receive a $90 million funding boost to create food and medicines for space explorers.
Read on UWA ImpactHumans are going back to the Moon, and beyond – but how will we feed them?
NASA’s Artemis I launch is a major step forward in humans going deeper and spending longer in space than ever before.
Read at The Conversation