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St.
Ambrose University Network Policy
The St. Ambrose University Computer Network (SAUNET)
is a university-wide computer network that
provides access to electronic mail, to library
and other information services, to local
computing resources and, through its connection
to the Internet, to computing and information
resources throughout the world. Its purpose is
to enrich the education of students, to expand
the research opportunities of faculty, and to
enhance communication across all constituencies
of the university. Students, staff and faculty
are encouraged to use the network for
educational research projects, for personal and
professional e-mail with colleagues and friends,
to help facilitate administrative tasks and
improve workgroup communication, and to access
educational information both within the
university and throughout the Internet.
SAUNET is designed to benefit all members of the
St. Ambrose community. But along with its
privileges come responsibilities. Responsible
use of SAUNET means not only following St.
Ambrose policies designed to maintain smooth
operation of our local network but also
following the policies established by the
National Science Foundation (NSF) and Advanced
Network Services (ANS) regarding use of the
Internet. Good network citizenship also involves
learning the etiquette and conventions of use
applicable to local and Internet communications.
All users of SAUNET agree to abide by the
Acceptable Use Policies of St. Ambrose
University, the National Science Foundation, and
Advanced Network Services (see below). Use of
SAUNET constitutes acceptance of the terms and
conditions specified by these policies. In
addition, users of SAUNET must observe all
"posted rules" and published restrictions
regarding use of the network, use of library
information services, use of laboratories, and
use of other attached computing resources.
SAUNET Acceptable Use Policy:
The following policy describes acceptable use of
SAUNET, whether accessed through computers and
devices owned by St. Ambrose University, or
remotely through outside equipment. For the
purposes of this policy, SAUNET is defined to
include all University owned computer equipment,
the operating systems and application software
that resides on this equipment, and the
networking hardware and software which connects
this equipment. By extension this policy applies
to all Internet traffic that flows through
SAUNET. Violations of this policy should be
reported to the Director of Academic &
Administrative Computing or members of the
department. Failure to comply with any item of
this policy constitutes a violation.
Violations of network policy are very serious
matters exposing violators to the formal
disciplinary procedures of the university
administered by the appropriate supervising
body. In the case of students, this would be the
Dean of Students. For faculty and staff, the
Dean of Faculty and/or their supervisor would be
involved. In order to protect the integrity of
the network, the director is authorized to
immediately close accounts and deny access to
individuals pending the completion of such
formal disciplinary procedures.
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In
general it is appropriate to use SAUNET for
private and professional correspondence, for
classroom and instructional activities, for
support and administrative functions of the
university, and for research related
activities.
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SAUNET
services may not be used for illegal purposes.
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It is
unacceptable to access a file over SAUNET
without permission of the owner. This includes
any materials on a file server, local hard
drive or local hard drive that is being
shared. Lack of protection on a file does not
constitute right of access.
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Users
of SAUNET are required to abide by State and
Federal statues. Violators are liable for
civil or criminal prosecution.
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It is
unacceptable to download and/or send obscene,
threatening or harassing materials over the
network. This includes the sending of chain
letters with questionable content or
downloading, viewing, sharing or printing
questionable materials. Users of SAUNET are
bound by the same standards of respect for the
rights of others that pertain to the St.
Ambrose community in general. The conduct of
users should be reflective of the mission of
this institution and its focus on respect for
humanity.
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Users
are liable for the use, or misuse, of their
own account. Therefore, you should never use
another person's account or identification, or
give your password or identification to
another person for the purpose of gaining
access to the network.
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It is
unacceptable to try to bypass standard
procedures, including unauthorized use of an
account, attempting to find out another
person's password, or using an account for
purposes for which it was not intended.
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It is
unacceptable to distribute a computer virus or
engage in any procedure which interferes with
the normal operation and delivery of services
over the network.
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Commercial use of SAUNET is
unacceptable--although a reasonable standard
will be used to judge what constitutes such
commercial use. For example, offering to sell
an item to a friend or friends would be
acceptable insofar as it falls under the
category of private correspondence. But
advertising the same item through a mass
mailing would not be acceptable. Similarly,
sending out solicited resumes or applications
would be acceptable, while mailing unsolicited
resumes and applications would not be
acceptable. The normal pursuit of university
support functions is acceptable but the use of
SAUNET for individual profit, e.g. by
operating a word processing service or doing
the work of a local business, is not
acceptable. If in doubt about an individual
practice, it is the user's responsibility to
find out whether or not it is permissible
under this provision by contacting an
authorized network administrator.
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Users
of SAUNET should conserve network resources.
Activities which result in excessive use of
network bandwidth, server storage, or system
time will be restricted or curtailed. Do not
print out enormous files downloaded from the
Internet unless you have very good reasons to
do so--leave them in soft copy instead.
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Only
authorized faculty and administrative
personnel should use mass e-mail over the
network (e-mail to all faculty or to all
students). In general there will be better
ways to post public messages of general
interest (e.g., mailing lists, newsgroups, and
the web).
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Users
of SAUNET should not access any networked
printer, server, or other device for which
they have not been given explicit permission.
If in doubt, ask.
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Anyone
who accesses the Internet through SAUNET
should adhere to NFS and ANS policies given
below. In addition Internet users should
familiarize themselves with Internet
etiquette, including proper use of mailing
lists, FTP logons, and e-mail etiquette.
Remember that when you are on the Internet you
are representing St. Ambrose University.
Everyone will know this from the fact that
your return address says "@sau.edu." So behave
in such a way as to reflect well on your
university.
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Only
legal, licensed software applications may
reside on or be transferred over SAUNET.
Reproduction of such software or its related
documentation is forbidden unless explicitly
authorized by the software developer. All St.
Ambrose University faculty, students and
employees shall use computer software only in
accordance with license agreements, whether it
is licensed to the University or to them.
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Hacking--unauthorized modification of
operating systems, application software, or
network software on any system attached to
SAUNET--is strictly forbidden.
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Outside
phone lines into SAUNET are expensive and
severely limited. So be considerate of other
users when dialing in to the network over the
phone lines. Do not engage in extended telnet
or web browsing sessions and try to conduct
your remote business as efficiently as
possible.
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It is
unacceptable to misuse information obtained
over SAUNET while performing work as a St.
Ambrose University employee. Information
stored on administrative computers and
microcomputers is confidential. Use or
distribution of such information other than as
assigned is prohibited by University policy
and State and Federal laws.
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It is
unacceptable to use or distribute any parts of
St. Ambrose University's administrative
records which are accessed unintentionally.
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Users
are not permitted to access SAUNET after their
eligibility for such access ends. Student
eligibility normally ends when the student is
no longer enrolled. Faculty and staff
eligibility normally ends at the termination
of employment. Reasonable grace periods of one
month will be provided.
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The
director has the right to remove mail and
other files from a user's space on the main
servers if they are a threat to the integrity
of the network. Extremely large amounts of
mail can cause problems for the mail server
and can render the service unavailable for all
members of the campus community.
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St.
Ambrose University is committed to providing
network services within a supportive learning
environment which encourages innovation and
the development of new skills. None-the-less,
violations of network policy are very serious
matters exposing violators to the formal
disciplinary procedures of the university
administered by the appropriate supervising
body. In the case of students, this would be
the Dean of Students. For faculty and staff,
the Dean of Faculty and/or their supervisor
would be involved. In order to protect the
integrity of the network, the director is
authorized to immediately close accounts and
deny access to individuals pending the
completion of such formal disciplinary
procedures.
NSFnet (National Science Foundation) Backbone
Services Acceptable Use Policy:
GENERAL PRINCIPLE:
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NSFnet
Backbone services are provided to support open
research and education in and among US
research and instructional institutions, plus
research arms of for-profit firms when engaged
in open scholarly communications and research.
Use for other purposes is not acceptable.
SPECIFICALLY ACCEPTABLE USES:
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Communications with foreign researchers and
educators in connection with research and
instruction, as long as any network that the
foreign user employs for such communication
provides reciprocal access to US researchers
and educators.
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Communication and exchange for professional
development, to maintain currency, or to
debate issues in a field or subfield of
knowledge.
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Use for
disciplinary-society, university-association,
government-advisory, or standards activities
related to the user's research and
instructional activities.
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Use in
applying for or administering grants or
contracts for research or instruction, but not
for fundraising or public relations
activities.
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Any
other administrative communications or
activities in direct support of research and
instruction.
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Announcements of new products or services for
use in research or instruction, but not
advertising of any kind.
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Any
traffic originating from a network of another
member agency of the Federal Networking
Council if the traffic meets the acceptable
use policy of that agency.
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Communication incidental to otherwise
acceptable use, except for illegal or
specifically unacceptable use.
UNACCEPTABLE USES:
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Use for
for-profit activities, unless covered by the
General Principle or as specifically
acceptable use.
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Extensive use for private or personal
business.
This statement applies to use of the NSFnet
Backbone only. NSF expects that connecting
networks will formulate their own use policies.
The NSF Division of Networking and
Communications Research and Infrastructure will
resolve any questions about this Policy or its
interpretation.
Advanced Network Services Acceptable Use Policy
(ANS AUP):
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All use
of ANS network services shall be intended to
facilitate the exchange of information in
furtherance of education and research, and
otherwise be consistent with the broad
objectives of ANS.
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Users
of ANS network services shall promote
efficient use of the networks to minimize, and
avoid if possible, congestion of the networks
and interference with the work of other users
of the networks.
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Users
of ANS network services shall not disrupt any
of the ANS networks as a whole or any
equipment or system forming part of its
systems, or any services provided over, or in
connection with, any of the ANS networks.
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ANS
networks shall not be used to transmit any
communication where the meaning of the
message, or its transmission or distribution,
would violate any applicable law or regulation
or would likely be highly offensive to the
recipient or recipients thereof.
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ANS
networks shall not be used for commercial
purposes. However, if a use is consistent with
the purposes and objectives of ANS, the
commercial activities in support of that use
will be considered an acceptable use of the
network.
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Advertising of commercial offerings is
forbidden. Discussion of a product's relative
advantages and disadvantages by users of the
product is encouraged. Vendors may respond to
questions about their products as long as the
responses are not in the nature of
advertising.
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Interpretation, application, and possible
modification of the Acceptable Use Policy
shall be within the sole discretion of ANS.
Questions about any issue arising under this
Policy should be directed to ANS by User
Organizations when an issue first arises.
ST.
AMBROSE UNIVERSITY
NETWORK POLICY CONTRACT
I
have read the St. Ambrose University Network
Policy and agree to abide by all of its
provisions, including the SAUNET Acceptable Use
Policy, the NSFnet Backbone Services Acceptable
Use Policy, and the Advanced Network Services
Acceptable Use Policy.
I
fully understand that a violation of network
policy is a very serious matter which is subject
to formal disciplinary procedures of the
university. In case of such a violation, the
Director of Academic & Administrative Computing
has the right to immediately close my account
and deny access to me pending the completion of
such formal disciplinary procedures.
Name: (please print):
______________________________________
Choose A password (please print):
__________________________
Signature ______________________________________
Date ______________
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