TABLE OF CONTENTS
APPENDIX
J
UCSC
COMPUTER
GUIDELINES
POLICIES
FOR USE OF UCSC COMPUTING FACILITIES
It
is the policy of the University of California to provide computer resources
to students, faculty and staff to be used in ways that are consistent with the
university's mission—instruction, research, and public service—and
in activities that support that mission, such as administration. These resources
include computers, terminals, networks, modems, and printers (see
University
of California Electronic Communications Policy, dated November 17, 2000, available
on the web at http://www.ucop.edu/ucophome/policies/ec/html/).
It
is the policy of the university to provide its users with access to local, national,
and international sources of information in an atmosphere that encourages sharing
of information, access to a rich collection of services, and open and free discussion.
The
university expects that its user community will respect the public trust through
which these resources have been provided. The work and efforts of the user community
should not be subject to unauthorized disclosure, tampering, destruction, theft,
harassment, nor should there be a denial of access to resources.
All
users of campus computing resources share in the responsibility of protecting
the rights of the entire community. All users must guard against abuses of the
university's information resources and systems. This includes computers with
one or more unique network addresses as well as computers that obtain network
addresses on a dynamic basis.
The
university has determined that the following list, while not exhaustive, characterizes
unacceptable behavior which may be subject to disciplinary action:
1.
use of university facilities in a manner that violates copyrights, patent protections,
or license agreements;
2.
attempts to gain unauthorized access to any information facility, whether successful
or not. This includes running programs that attempt to calculate or guess passwords,
or that are designed and crafted to trick other users into disclosing their
passwords. It also includes electronic eavesdropping on communications facilities;
3.
any violation of state law as described in the Penal Code. As an example, a
copy of Section 502 of the California Penal Code is available separate from
this policy statement;
4.
any action that invades the privacy of individuals or entities that are the
creators, authors, users, or subjects of informational resources;
5.
any action that disrupts the availability of a system for others, such as running
programs that utilize all system resources and prevent others from making productive
use of the system;
6.
any use of university computing facilities for personal gain (including advertising.
or political purposes without the prior approval of the university;
7.
any use of university computing facilities to harass others;
8.
attempts to alter damage, delete, destroy or otherwise abuse any computer or
network resource.
In
addition, the user should be aware of the following policies and expectations:
•
The
university grants permission to members of its community to use computation
resources by issuing individual computer accounts. As a condition of receiving
such an account, the user must exercise diligence to keep his or her password
as a secret and not disclose it to any other person. Users of shared computers
or networks which connect to the campus network should not share or transfer
their account privileges to any other person.
•
The
university expects that all those who choose to use our off-campus network connections
will understand and honor the policies of those regional and national network
organizations to which the university is a party. The use policies for these
networks are available separately from this policy statement.
•
Campus
units that administer computers may also establish guidelines for the appropriate
use of their equipment in addition to these campus-wide policies. These guidelines
must be consistent with the campus-wide policies.
• When a non-university-owned
computer is used on campus, the user must follow all of these campus-wide policies.
In addition, if the computer is attached to the campus network