The technology
resources at Abraham Baldwin Agricultural College support the
educational programs of the college. Since computing resources are
limited, it is important that these resources be used in an
efficient manner for meaningful projects. This policy is not
intended to be exhaustive and Abraham Baldwin Agricultural College
(ABAC) reserves the right to limit, restrict, or extend computing
privileges and access to its technology resources.
General Guidelines for
Computer Lab Users
Users of the labs are
expected to be responsible in their use of equipment and respectful
of the rights of other individuals.
In support of its
mission of teaching and service, ABAC provides access to technology
resources for students, faculty, staff, and other authorized users
within institutional priorities and financial capabilities. The
technology resources of ABAC, including facilities, hardware,
software, networks, and computer accounts, are the property of the
State of Georgia. The use of these resources is a privilege granted
by ABAC to authorized users to conduct business. ABAC requires all
persons authorized to use its technology resources to do so
responsibly and in compliance with all state and federal laws, all
contractual and license agreements, and all policies of ABAC and the
Board of Regents of the University System of Georgia. Authorized
users of the institution's technology resources must act responsibly
to maintain the integrity and security of these resources. Each user
of an institution’s computing resources is ultimately responsible
for the use of that computing resource and for the use of his or her
computer account.
Inappropriate Use of
Technology Resources
1. No one shall
knowingly endanger the security of any institutional technology
resource, nor willfully interfere with authorized usage by
circumventing or attempting to circumvent normal resource limits,
logon procedures, or security regulations.
2. No technologies
shall be connected to the institution's technology resources that
interfere with authorized usage of those resources. The institution
reserves the right to restrict the use of any technologies that may
endanger the security and/or integrity of its technology resources.
3. Encroaching on
or disrupting another person's use of institutional computers is
prohibited. Actions that waste computing resources (misuse of disk
space to store files or playing games that are not part of a class
assignment) are prohibited. Examples of such acts include but are
not limited to: Internet gaming; Internet radio; Internet file
transfers; sending excessive messages either locally or off-campus
(including but not limited to electronic chain letters); initiating
denial of service attacks; spamming; sniffing; running scams;
reconfiguring; or using an inordinately high percentage of
bandwidth.
4. The
institution’s technology resources and network facilities shall not
be used for personal gain or commercial purposes.
5. Misrepresenting
a person's identity or relationship to the institution when
obtaining or using institutional computer or network privileges is
prohibited.
6. Attempting to
access any files or accounts other than your own, reading, altering,
or deleting any other person's computer files or electronic mail
without specific authorization is prohibited.
7. Copying,
downloading, installing, distributing, infringing, or otherwise
using any software, data files, images, text, or other materials in
violation of copyrights, trademarks, service marks, patents, other
intellectual property rights, contracts, or license agreements is
prohibited. All usage of technology resources shall be in compliance
with federal and state copyright laws and in full conformance with
the Regents Guide to Understanding Copyright and Fair Use.
8. Creating,
installing, or knowingly distributing a computer virus, "Trojan
horse," or other surreptitiously destructive program on any
institutional computer or network facility, regardless of whether
any demonstrable harm results, is prohibited.
9. Modifying or
reconfiguring any institutional computing resource or network
facility is prohibited.
10. Users of
institutional technology resources shall have no expectation of
privacy of materials stored on those resources. The institution
reserves the right to access any of its computer resources when
federal or state laws or institutional policies may have been
violated or where institutional contractual obligations or
institutional operations may be impeded. Computer users should not
place confidential information in computers without protecting it
appropriately. The institution cannot and will not guarantee the
privacy or confidentiality of computer files, electronic mail, or
other information stored or transmitted by its computers. All
computer usage on ABAC technology resources and network facilities
is subject to the provisions of the Georgia Open Records Act,
O.C.G.A. §50-18-70 et seq.
11. Authorized
computer users shall take full responsibility for messages that they
transmit through the institution's technology resources. The
institution's technology resources shall not be used to transmit any
communications prohibited by law, including but not limited to
fraudulent, harassing, or threatening messages.
12. Damaging the
hardware (spilled drinks or foods, marking on the hardware with
pens/pencils) is prohibited.
13. Disruption of
other individuals in the lab (excessive noise, loud talking,
listening to audio content without headphones) is prohibited.
14. Except for
resources made available for public use in the library, all
institutional technology resources and facilities are provided
exclusively for the use of ABAC faculty, staff, and students, and
individuals associated with programs and institutions approved by
the OITS. Unescorted children and other individuals not approved by
the OITS are expressly prohibited from using either institutional
resources or facilities. Similarly, approved users are solely
responsible for the actions of unapproved users (children, friends)
with them in labs and other facilities, and may be asked to leave if
any actions by these individuals are deemed disruptive. Repeated
offenses may result in the loss of facility privileges.
Student Misuse of
Technology Resources
Persons misusing the
institution's technology resources in violation of federal and state
laws, Board of Regents and institutional policies are subject to
disciplinary actions by the institution and/or forfeiture of their
computer privileges.
In the event such
misuse of computer resources threatens to compromise the integrity
or jeopardize the security of institutional computer resources or
harm authorized users of those resources, the institution's director
of technology or his/her designee is authorized to take any and all
necessary actions, including the immediate confiscation and/or
disabling of an institutional computer resource or the temporary or
permanent termination of a computer account, to protect,
investigate, and ensure the security and proper use of the computer
resources.
1. Allegations that
students have violated the Student Use Policy will be dealt with in
accordance with existing policies for allegations of student
misconduct.
2. An initial report
of the student violating the policy shall be immediately made to the
person responsible. The computer lab supervisor will then determine
the details of the alleged violation and make a determination that
the details did, or did not, violate the Student Use Policy.
If the lab supervisor
cannot determine if the policy was violated
- or -
There is any dispute
between the student and the lab supervisor over the determination
that the policy had been violated
- then -
The issue may be
referred to an administrative panel set forth in the section below,
College Authority, for a determination whether or not the alleged
activity violated the Student Use Policy. This panel shall provide,
in a timely fashion, a determination that the alleged acts did, or
did not, violate the Student Use Policy.
3. Once a
determination has been reached that the student has violated policy,
the lab supervisor shall follow these guidelines:
a. First violation. The
lab supervisor should make sure the student understands the policy,
and that their acts were a violation of the policy. No formal
disciplinary action need be taken, but the matter should be
documented for future reference.
b. Second violation (of
the same nature as the first). The lab supervisor should provide the
student with a written notice that the policy was violated, that
this was a second occurrence of the same violation, and that future
violations will result in disciplinary action.
c. Third violation (of
the same nature as the first). The lab supervisor should provide
written notice to the student that their repeated violation of the
Policy on Student Use of Technology Resources constitutes a breach
of discipline, and the matter will be handled in accordance with the
ABAC Student Conduct Code.
d. Repeated
violations, each of a different nature, which indicate to the lab
supervisor that the individual concerned demonstrates an intentional
disregard of the Policy on Student Use of Technology Resources, may
also be considered together as a breach of discipline, and may be
handled in accordance with the ABAC Student Conduct Code.
College Authority
Authority for these
guidelines lies with the Institutional Technology Committee.
Interpretation of questionable acceptable usage will be determined
by the committee. Until an issue is resolved, questionable use will
be considered "not acceptable."
Violations will be
handled within accordance of the ABAC Student Conduct Code for
appropriate disciplinary action. Disciplinary actions may include
loss of access privileges to academic computing resources. The
Student Code of Conduct, including guidelines related to reasonable
search and seizure, as written in the Student Handbook apply to all
aspects of academic computing facilities and resources.
Definitions
Technology Resource:
Technology resources comprise all computers, computer peripherals,
and electronic data replication, storage, transmission, and
manipulation devices owned and/or controlled by any part of ABAC or
connected to the institution's communications facilities, including
departmental computers and the institution's computing network
facilities accessed by anyone from anywhere.
Authorized Use:
Authorized use of ABAC technology resources is use of technology
resources that is consistent with the education and service mission
of the institution and consistent with this policy.
Authorized User:
Authorized users are as follows:
Current faculty,
staff, and students of ABAC
Individuals with
explicit permission from OITS
Individuals whose
access furthers the mission of the institution and whose usage
does not interfere with other users' access to technology
resources.
ABAC Office of
Information Technology & Services
Phone:
229-391-4850