This document consists of separate sections. You may either read through the entire document, or you can jump directly to any of the following sections below by clicking on them.
Preface:
Why this Package?
Software
Copyright Policy
Software
Copyright Compliance, Guidelines
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Copyright contents list.)
If someone violates computer software copyright laws or license agreements, they are liable for a fine or possible jail sentence. If they work for you, use the computer for a class you teach, or use a computer or software for which you or a department you manage are responsible or to which you gave them access, YOU are also liable. So is the District. Even if you didn't know they were doing it! You are responsible for knowing and following the law YOURSELF and for educating THOSE YOU TEACH OR SUPERVISE. You must be able to demonstrate that you have done this to protect yourself. So how can you do that without giving up the already shrinking pittance of free time you have eeked out? If only you could find someone who has already set up a program and created materials....
Search no more!
This package provides you with the materials you need to help your department learn and comply with Software Copyright guidelines. Awareness and training materials are provided which you may use in your efforts to educate departmental personnel.
COPYRIGHT: Unless otherwise noted: (1) materials in this package are copyrighted by the University of Florida or the Software Publishers Association, (2) materials may be reprinted, adapted, and/or reproduced, and further distributed for the non-profit purpose of promoting the ethical and legal use of software provided that credit is given to the University of Florida Council on Information Technologies and Services or to the Software Publishers Association.
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The principles for using and managing software derive from U.S. copyright law and legal agreements in the form of licenses and purchase agreements. That foundation makes the basic policy governing software clear:
All faculty, staff, and students of the Conroe Independent School District are required and expected to obey the laws and legal agreements governing software use. Failure to do so can lead to monetary damages and/or criminal penalties for the individual violator. Because such violations are also against District policies and rules, disciplinary action will be taken as appropriate.
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It is your responsibility as a Conroe Independent School District employee to make sure that you are in compliance with all state and district regulations relating to the use of computer software. You should make sure that you can document the legality of each software package on any workstation assigned to you and to the workstations of employees who report to you or whose workstations you manage. Use a log sheet for checking the software on your workstation. Any problems should be reported to your supervisor.
Evidence of legal acquisition (purchase, lease, gift) for all software in use or possession must be kept. Unit records should be sufficient to identify and retrieve evidence of legal acquisition for capitalized software rapidly. Records for uncapitalized software should be held in the unit, be readily retrievable, and should include statements of all licenses in use, license counts, locations where software is installed or available, to whom software is assigned, and sub-license statements where required. It is recommended that supporting materials be kept in a notebook.
Software must be installed and distributed within the restrictions defined by licenses or agreements with vendors. Installations are to be documented so that it is clear what was installed, when, and by whom. Backup copies, if permitted, must be made in accordance with licenses or vendor agreements and documented also. For computers with multiple users, operating system features or utilities to protect installed software from misuse or copying must be utilized.
In most computer operating environments, utilities are available to help protect software. For stand-alone microcomputers, there is a variety of "disk-locking" programs for each major operating system (DOS, Macintosh, OS/2). Network utilities for Novell and other microcomputer networks are available to control the number of users of each software package, as well as to protect packages from illegal copying. Password and file security protections should also be used routinely to control access. System managers for multiple-use operating systems such as UNIX should make full use of operating system features which prevent unauthorized use or copying.
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