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Comprehensive
Policy on Electronic Publishing & Appropriate Use of Computing
Resources, Information Technologies and Networks
[Violations of this policy may be reported to abuse@wsu.edu.]
Summary:
WSU
respects freedom of speech and does not restrict the contents of
electronic mail or web pages beyond restrictions inherent in the
law. The policy includes permissible uses of WSU electronic mail
and outlines specific restrictions on the use of all University
electronic resources, including web pages, networks, and electronic
mail. Additional polices which apply to students and web electronic
publications are outlined. WSU respects the privacy of users and
does not routinely inspect or monitor use of computing and networking
resources, however, this policy describes situations which may result
in the University accessing electronic mail or files. WSU-imposed
sanctions for inappropriate use of University electronic resources
are also included.
General
Policy Statement:
In
support of academic instruction, research, public service, and administrative
functions, Washington State University (WSU) encourages the use
of, and provides access to, information technologies and network
resources. This enables WSU users access to global information resources,
as well as the ability to communicate with other users worldwide.
In keeping with its role and values, WSU supports the use of electronic
communication for the conduct of official WSU business and for individual
professional purposes related to an official WSU purpose.
This
Appropriate Use Policy governs the use of WSU computing resources,
information technologies, and networks. This includes, but is not
limited to, computers, computing staff, hardware, software, networks,
computing laboratories, databases, files, information, software
licenses, computing-related contracts, network bandwidth, usernames,
passwords, documentation, disks, CD-ROMs, DVDs, magnetic tapes,
and electronic mail.
Users
of WSU's computing resources, information technologies, and networks
are responsible for using those resources in accordance with the
law and with WSU policy. Use of WSU computing, information technologies,
and networking resources is a privilege that depends upon appropriate
use of those resources. Individuals who violate the law or WSU policy
regarding the use of computing resources, information technologies,
and networks are subject to loss of access to those resources as
well as to WSU disciplinary and/or legal action.
Freedom
of Expression:
WSU
respects the First Amendment rights of freedom of speech, including
academic freedom of artists and scholars. Therefore, WSU does not
restrict the contents of electronic mail of staff, faculty, and
students or the contents of faculty, staff, and student individual
World Wide Web (Web) pages linked to the official WSU Web pages
beyond the restrictions inherent in complying with the law.
These
individual Web pages represent the work of the individual artists,
scholars, and authors who created them and not WSU. All such pages
are required to contain an appropriate disclaimer indicating that
WSU is not responsible for the creation of, or the content of, these
Web pages.
Applicability:
This
policy applies to all WSU employees, students, visiting faculty,
and volunteers who use computing resources, information technologies,
and networks owned or managed by WSU. All such individuals, by virtue
of their use of WSU computer resources, information technologies,
and networks, accept the responsibility for using these resources
only for appropriate WSU activities. Computer network users are
responsible for reading, understanding, and behaving in a manner
consistent with this policy.
Separate
policies apply to the use of information technologies and networks
that are made accessible to the public in the ordinary course of
WSU business. For example, WSU makes computer monitors available
in its libraries to all library users. Policies governing the use
of such information technologies and networks shall be posted in
the general locale of the public access facilities or be made available
to users of those technologies and networks. The use of publicly
accessible information technologies and networks by a WSU employee
acting within the scope of the employee's employment shall, however,
be governed by this Appropriate Use Policy.
Appropriate
Use:
WSU's
computer resources, information technologies, and networks may be
used for legitimate WSU purposes only. Thus, appropriate use of
WSU's computer resources, information technologies, and networks
includes:
Students:
All appropriate use by students related to completion of WSU class
assignments or their education at WSU; and
Employees:
All appropriate use by faculty, administrators, and staff directly
related to instruction, research, and scholarly, professional, and
administrative endeavors on behalf of WSU or within the scope of
WSU employment. Students while working in their WSU employment capacities
will be governed by policies for employees.
Inappropriate
Use:
WSU
computer resources, information technologies, and networks shall
not be used for:
·
Supporting, establishing, or conducting any private business operation
or commercial activity;
·
Conducting personal activities unrelated to any WSU or student
educational purpose unless otherwise allowed by this policy;
·
Attempting to gain unauthorized access to any portion of the system
or using WSU computer resources, information technologies, and
networks as a staging area to attempt to gain unauthorized access
to any other system or account;
·
Violating WSU's policy of prohibiting discrimination against individuals
on the basis of race, sex (including sexual harassment), religion,
age, color, creed, national or ethnic origin, physical, mental,
or sensory disability, marital status, sexual orientation, and
status as a Vietnam-era or disabled Veteran;
·
Intentionally disseminating, accessing, or providing a hyperlink
to obscenity, as that term is defined by the law, unless such
activities are directly related to an employee's legitimate research
or scholarship purpose or to a student's completion of an academic
requirement;
·
Sending unsolicited electronic mail (e.g., "spam") in
violation of Washington law or in quantities that interfere with
WSU's or another's server. Senders who anticipate sending large
numbers of unsolicited electronic mail messages at one time are
responsible for consulting with the appropriate server administrator
prior to determine whether or not the sending of the mail is likely
to cause a malfunction in a server;
·
Engaging in political activities that violate state law (state
law prohibits the use of state facilities or public resources
for the purposes of assisting in an election campaign or for the
promotion or opposition to a ballot proposition);
·
Destroying, altering, compromising the integrity or security,
or making inaccessible WSU computer resources, information technologies,
and networks when such uses are not authorized;
·
Utilizing WSU resources with the purpose of intentionally interfering
with others' use of computing resources, information technologies,
or network resources or conduct of WSU business;
·
Compromising the privacy of users of the computer resources, information
technologies, and networks;
·
Violating copyright law (thus, information technology and network
users who do not hold the copyright on a work must have permission
to publish information, graphics, cartoons, photographs, or other
material, or the publication must be otherwise permitted under
copyright law);
·
Violating trademark law;
·
Violating any federal, state, or local law;
·
Copying of software in violation of a license or when copying
is not authorized; or
·
Violating WSU policy. Expressing opposition to any WSU policy
using computer resources, information technologies, and networks
is not a violation of WSU policy.
Additional
Policies Applying to WSU Employees:
Computer
resources, use of information technologies, and networks by WSU
employees is governed by Washington State's Ethics in Public Service
Law (Ethics Law), RCW 42.52. Students, while working in an employment
capacity for WSU, are also governed by the Ethics Law. WSU employees
must comply with the Ethics Law and with any rules adopted by the
Executive Ethics Board. Computer resources, use of information technologies,
and networks by WSU employees are subject to the Executive Ethics
Board's rule on Use of State Resources, WAC 292-110-010.
Employees
shall use WSU's information technologies and networks primarily
for the purpose of conducting WSU business. Employees may use WSU's
information technologies and networks to conduct other business
within the scope of their employment, such as communicating with
members of professional organizations about their area of expertise,
or visiting Web pages of such professional organizations.
Employees
may use WSU's electronic mail system to send personal messages,
provided that such messages are insignificant in cost and resource
usage, and provided that all such messages comply with the statements
in this policy. Examples of permissible uses of WSU electronic mail
include:
·
Communication for those who are hearing impaired (rather than
using the telephone);
·
Notices of social and public service events, (e.g., blood drives,
shared leave requests, etc.);
·
Notices of gatherings (e.g., lunches, birthdays, receptions);
·
Agency-wide or unit-wide notifications that are used for communicating
good will among employees (e.g., holiday greetings, congratulatory
messages, etc.);
·
Communications for purposes related to employee benefits when
WSU has determined that such communications will contribute to
staff efficiency;
·
Personal electronic mail messages to friends or family, provided
that such messages:
·
not interfere with the performance of job duties;
·
do not result in an additional cost to WSU;
·
are brief in duration and do not disrupt or distract from the
conduct of state business due to volume or frequency; and
·
do not compromise the security or integrity of state information
or software.
Employees
may make occasional but limited personal use of computers and the
Internet if such use is in conformance with WAC 292-110-010 and
BPPM 20.37.
Additional
Policies Applying to Students:
In
addition to this policy, the Standards of Student Conduct govern
students while enrolled in WSU. The Standards of Student Conduct
include a provision prohibiting computer abuses, WAC 504-25-085.
Students who wish to use computer labs also sign a User Agreement
with Student Computing Services.
Additional
Policies for Web Electronic Publications:
The
quality of information published and communicated by WSU plays an
important role in maintaining the strong reputation and image of
WSU. Members of the WSU community create electronic Web pages, publication
pages, or other electronic publications that carry out official
WSU business in support of WSU's mission. Because all Internet users
may view electronic publications, the quality of electronic publications
reflects upon all members of the WSU community. In general, electronic
publications are subject to the same WSU policies and standards
as print publications.
Unit
Web Pages and Other Electronic Publications:
Unit Web pages and other electronic publications are the equivalent
of printed publications or official communication. They are official
WSU publications.
WSU
Web graphic identity guidelines are available and all academic and
administrative units are encouraged to use them. Each unit Web page,
cluster of linked pages, or other electronically published information
will contain:
·
The unit name;
·
An electronic mail address for the unit's Web page creator or
administrator;
·
The page's expiration date when appropriate;
·
A link to WSU's Copyright, Disclaimer, and Freedom of Expression
Policies; and
·
A link to WSU's main or home page.
Units
publishing their own electronic information may set additional requirements,
such as the inclusion of the equal opportunity statement. A unit
may decide whether it is of benefit to link the individual electronic
pages of their faculty, staff, or students to the unit Web page.
Individual
Web Pages:
Individuals may create Web pages and other electronic publications
that provide information relevant to that individual's role at WSU.
The work on individual Web pages and electronic publications represents
the work of individual artists, scholars, and authors who created
them, and they are not intended to represent WSU. As such, WSU bears
no responsibility for the content of individual Web pages.
Each
individual page, cluster of linked pages, or other electronically
published information will display by a browser:
·
The individual's name;
·
The individual's position or affiliation with WSU;
·
The individual's electronic mail address; and
·
A link to WSU's Copyright, Disclaimer, and Freedom of Expression
Policies.
Individual
pages are the responsibility of their developers.
WSU
respects the First Amendment and does not restrict the content of
employee and student Web pages or other electronic publications
beyond the restrictions of WSU policy and applicable law. WSU, however,
reserves the right to remove from any WSU server a Web page or electronic
publication that is found to be in violation of the law or WSU policies.
Privacy:
WSU respects the privacy of users and does not routinely inspect
or monitor use of computing and networking resources. However, WSU
does not guarantee the security and privacy of any user's electronic
mail and/or electronic files. Electronic mail can easily be misdirected
or forwarded to others. For these reasons, it is not advisable to
send information in electronic mail that you would not want to be
distributed to others.
WSU
may access such electronic mail or files in a number of situations:
·
Requests for Public Disclosure. All electronic records
and all electronic mail messages are potentially public records
subject to disclosure.
·
The state's Public Records Act (RCW 42.17) requires that
electronic mail or files containing information relating to
the conduct of WSU business is made available for public inspection
and copying. If WSU receives a request for public disclosure
of electronic mail or other electronic files, WSU staff will
access electronic mail and files to determine whether such material
must be disclosed under the law. If WSU's public records officer
determines that electronic mail and/or files are public records,
such records will be provided to the individual who makes the
public records request.
·
Retention of Electronic Mail. Electronic mail is backed
up and retained in accordance with record retention requirements
of state law and WSU policy. See RCW 42.17, WSU BPPM 90.01. Additionally,
users are advised that electronic messages and other files are
not removed from their hard drives when erased by the individual.
Material that continues to exist on a hard drive, or on another's
computer, also may be subject to disclosure.
·
Access During Routine System Maintenance. Responsible system
maintenance may require that files are backed up, data cached,
activity logs kept, and overall system activity monitored. In
the process of these activities, WSU staff may see an individual
user's electronic mail and files.
·
Access for WSU Business. WSU employees may access all electronic
mail or files on another employee's computer with that employee's
permission, or with a supervisor's approval, when that employee
is unavailable and access is for a legitimate business purpose.
However, in the interest of faculty collegiality, WSU or the authorized
employee seeking access to the electronic files shall reasonably
attempt to inform or seek approval of the faculty member whose
files are being accessed for business purposes. A supervisor may
access electronic mail or files within his or her unit for legitimate
business purposes without seeking approval. Supervisors who access
electronic files or give permission to access individual files
shall do so in a manner that is consistent with any research and/or
confidentiality agreements which may apply to those files. In
the interest of faculty collegiality, individual units are encouraged
to develop unit protocols for sharing access to electronic files
and mail. Individual units may develop unit protocols for sharing
of and access to electronic mail and files. Any access by a supervisor
or co-worker for a legitimate business purpose shall be limited
to that purpose.
·
Access in Investigation of Misconduct. A supervisor may
only access electronic files to investigate an employee's misconduct
when the access is consistent with all legal requirements, including
reasonableness under the circumstances. Such access may only be
done with the approval of the appropriate dean or director and
in a manner consistent with other provisions of this policy. If
the person doing the search is dean/director-level or higher,
that person must seek approval from the appropriate next-level
administrator. This provision applies to monitoring of employee
accounts when the monitoring is done because of suspected illegal
activity or policy violations.
·
Monitoring of Accounts. An account may be inspected or
monitored when:
·
activity from an account prevents access to computing
or networking resources by others;
·
general usage patterns indicate that an account is responsible
for illegal activity;
·
there are reports of violations of policy or law;
·
it is necessary, in the judgment of WSU administration,
to do so to protect WSU from liability;
·
WSU receives a public records request or a valid subpoena;
or
·
it is required by, and consistent with, any other law.
User's
Responsibility for Maintaining Privacy:
System
users are responsible for maintaining appropriate access restrictions
for their files, as well as protecting their passwords. An employee
or student who knowingly allows another person to use his or her
username or password may be found responsible for any inappropriate
use on the part of that person.
Sanctions:
Evidence
of illegal activities or policy violations will be turned over to
the appropriate authorities as soon as possible after detection.
WSU-imposed sanctions for inappropriate use of WSU computer resources,
information technologies, and networks will depend upon the nature
of the abuse in question. Inappropriate use includes failure by
supervisors or co-workers to adhere to provisions governing access
to others' electronic files in this policy. Such sanctions may include
restrictions on access, suspension of the individual's user account,
or revocation of the individual's user account. WSU-imposed sanctions
may also include disciplinary measures, including expulsion from
WSU and/or termination of employment. Any such disciplinary action
will be taken in accordance with the applicable provisions of the
Faculty Manual, the student code or personnel policy, including
any collective bargaining agreement.
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