Software piracy is a criminal act under Federal Law. Title 18,
United States Code now provides penalties
ranging from one year in prison and fines up to $25,000.00, to five
years and fines up to 250,000.00 (depending on the severity of offense),
for illegally copying or distributing software.
1. Users may only use those computer accounts in facilities they have been authorized to
use by ITS. A user may NOT use a computer account assigned to another person. Access granted to computer resources
through the negligence or naivete of another user is not considered authorized
use.
2. Computing facilities
are to be used for instruction, academics, research and administrative
functions. The computing facilities may not be used for commercial purposes
or monetary gain. This includes any personal equipment connected to the Millsaps network.
3. Individuals are
responsible for all use of their computer accounts and equipment. This
includes the content of E-mail messages, web pages, and computer files.
4. Fraudulent, illegal,
harassing, embarrassing, obscene, indecent, profane, inappropriate or
intimidating materials cannot be sent, printed, requested, displayed or
stored.
5. Users are prohibited
from reading, modifying, deleting, or copying another user's e-mail. Users
are also prohibited from sending unsolicited junk mail, chain letters
and for-profit messages.
6. Users may not search
for, access, or copy directories, programs, files or data not belonging
to them, without express authorization to do so.
7. No one should attempt
to modify system facilities, "crash" any computing system, degrade
system performance, or subvert the restrictions associated with computer
accounts. The willful introduction of computer "viruses" or
other disruptive/destructive programs into the Millsaps Computing environment
or external networks is prohibited.
8. As users have access to other computers and networks, the following
is also applicable: the use of computing systems to attempt to gain unauthorized
access to remote systems, decryption of system/user passwords or modifying
authorized privilege levels is not permitted.
9. One should not
encroach on use of the computer by others. This includes activities that
tie up computer resources for excessive game playing or other trivial
applications.
10. The World Wide
Web (WWW) provides the College with a world wide audience, including prospective
students, faculty, staff, alumni, and more. It is a medium for the College
to promote itself and its educational mission. The College's presence
on the WWW as with all other external communication must portray a positive
image. Specific standards and guidelines have been developed for "official"
pages. See the "Getting to know Millsaps" on the Millsaps web
for more information.
11. Individual home
pages (also referred to as personal home pages) are solely the responsibility
of the person creating it (or whose account the page is on). They may
not contain the College logo or any official wordmarks. These pages may
not contain any illegal, obscene, indecent, profane, intimidating, inappropriate
or other material that may embarrass or damage the goodwill or reputation
of the College. Individuals are prohibited from creating web pages or
other public access documents that draw undue traffic to the college through
its network connections.
12. Millsaps College
is bound by Title 17 of the United States Code on Copyright and supports
the provisions contained therein. Individuals are likewise bound by copyright
laws. Various software packages have been licensed to Millsaps College
for use. However, neither the College nor its employees own this software
or documentation. Unless specifically authorized by the software company,
this material cannot be copied.
13. Millsaps College
does not condone the illegal or unauthorized duplication or use of software.
Every person who uses College computing equipment or any computer while
on College property or conducting College business, is individually responsible
for complying with all copyright laws and software licensing agreements.
14. Millsaps College
recognizes and endorses the privacy of individuals in using the computing
facilities and will use good faith in preventing privacy abuses. Users
are advised, however, that Millsaps College is a private institution that
must protect the integrity and safety of the College and its computing
facilities, employees and students. On occasion, authorized individuals
of the College may be required to examine files maintained on the College's computer
facilities. For example, ITS personnel must have access to all files to provide maintenance, data storage,
security of information systems and software auditing. Additionally, the
College reserves the right to authorize special examination of computer
files if the College determines the action appropriate.
Abuse of computing privileges and any violations of the guidelines and
policies established by the College will be considered as serious matters.
Infractions may result in (i) loss of use privileges, (ii) referral to
the Honors Council, (iii) referral to the Judicial Council, (iv) disciplinary
sanctions, (v) dismissal from the College, (vi) termination of employment,
(vii) legal action, and (viii) criminal proceedings. During any investigation,
the College reserves the right to suspend computing privileges pending
a final determination by the College.
Revised: 8/8/03
With the proliferation of microcomputer
use, software theft has emerged as a major problem that has threatened
to impede the development of new software products. Software theft,
sometimes romantically called piracy, involves the unauthorized
duplication of software. Microcomputer software creates unique problems
because it is so easy to duplicate, and the copy is usually as good
as the original. Still, this does not legitimize piracy. Most microcomputer
users don't equate creating unauthorized copies of software with
theft, that is just what it is.
1) The Copyright Act of 1976, as amended
by the Computer Software Act of 1980, is clear. The copyright holder
has exclusive rights, including the right to make and distri-bute
copies. Title 17 of the U.S. Code states that "it is illegal to
make or distribute copies of copyrighted material without authorization."
2) Patents, unlike copyrights, protect
the idea behind an item, not merely the particular form in which
the idea appears. Few software publishers obtain patents on their
software because of the standard of novelty that must be met for
protection. Yet, the patent law does provide protection for some
software packages.
3) State statutes and common law protect
trade secrets embodied in computer software. The owner of a trade
secret takes measures to prevent it from becoming known to individuals
other than those selected by the owner to access it. To maintain
this element of secrecy, software vendors use license agreements.
The typical license agreement will include restrictions by which
users state that they will not copy the program or show it to any
third party without the vendor's consent.
4) Besides the traditional methods
of intellectual property protection, some software developers have
turned to creative ways of restricting a buyer's use of purchased
software. One such innovation is the shrink-wrap license. The shrink-wrap
license purports to bind the buyer of the software when the seal
is broken. Typically, the diskettes containing the software programs
are inside a sealed package and the license is printed on the package.
The license claims that a buyer's opening of the package is effective
as acceptance to the license terms. The terms generally provide
that (1) title to the product remains with the manufacturer and
the product is licensed, not sold; (2) the product may be used only
by the licensee on a single central processing unit; and (3) copying,
modifying, or transferring the program is restricted or prohibited.
1) The software is shareware. With
shareware, copying software and sharing it with others is not only
permitted, it's encouraged. Users may evaluate shareware software
and then pay a registration fee to the author if they wish to continue
using the software and receive manuals, technical support, and program
updates.
2) Users can also copy and distribute
public domain software. Unlike shareware, public domain software
lacks a registration fee.
3) The Copyright Act allows users to
make a copy of copyrighted software for backup purposes if a backup
copy is not provided.
4) The software publisher (the copyright
holder) is the only entity authorized for making exceptions to any
laws or agreements concerning the copying of their software package.
1) In previous years, most software
vendors protected their software with technical schemes, such as
making laser-burn holes on floppy disks (Lotus 1-2-3), writing data
between sectors, and imbedding counters to keep track of the number
of copies made (dBase). However, the increasing use of a hard disk
and the growing number of local area networks, have made technical
protection schemes impractical. Today, a few major software publishers
still use technical protection schemes.
2) Software publishers have united
in organizations including SPA (Software Publishers Association)
and the BSA (Business Software Association) and launched public
awareness programs in hope to educate business and educational institutions
about the perils of software piracy. Both associations publish and
distribute pamphlets and brochures outlining software theft and
the laws against it.
3) Finally, many software publishers
are aggressively prosecuting violators of copyright laws and license
agreements. Individuals, corporations, educational institutions,
and even branches of the government have been successfully sued
by irate software publishers crying copyright infringement.
- A legitimate copy of a software package
has several benefits over an illegitimate one:
2) Often publishers include tutorials
with properly obtained software.
3) Toll-free numbers and fax lines
are often available for technical support to paying users of a software
package.
4) Users who purchase and register
their software packages are informed of software updates as they
become available by the software manufacturers.
5) Purchasing authorized copies of
software programs is both legal and ethical.
- A final thought, educational institutions
are not exempt from any of the laws and agreements governing software
protection. The copyright laws, patents, licenses and agreements
apply to the educational environment as well as the business environment.
In addition to the obvious need to obey the laws and agreements
governing software duplication; administrators, faculty, and staff
of an institution of higher education have an added responsibility
of setting examples to the students so that they will learn respect
for intellectual property.
Administration, faculty, staff, or
students who make unauthorized copies of Millsaps software libel both
themselves and the University. If a software package is needed,
the proper procedure should be followed to acquire it.
Millsaps College is a College
of the United Methodist Church.
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