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Code of Online Conduct |
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of Online Conduct available in .pdf format (4 pages 61k) |
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The Toronto District School Board (TDSB) provides online systems
and resources for use by employees and students. Online resources
include all material that is accessed through a computer or telecommunications
network. |
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All policies, procedures, codes of behaviour and rules of the
TDSB apply to those using online systems and resources provided
by or on behalf of the TDSB. The "Code of Online Conduct"
pertains to the use of online systems and resources. This Code
has been prepared to protect the rights and safety of all. |
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The TDSB takes appropriate measures to ensure the security of
the facilities and information that may be contained in them. The
TDSB reserves the right to monitor the use of online resources
by all that access the systems. |
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1) Personal Safety Rules |
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Never reveal information about your personal identity (such
as your name, address, phone number, age, physical description
or school) to strangers whom you may encounter online. Likewise,
do not reveal such information in a public online forum where
you may not know everyone who might see the information.
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Never reveal personal information online about someone else
unless you have their prior permission and you know the information
will not be used for harmful purposes.
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Never reveal your access password or that of anyone else.
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Never send a picture of yourself, another person or a group
over an electronic network without prior informed permission
of all the individuals involved and, in the case of minors,
their parents or guardians.
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Report immediately to a teacher any message or request that
you receive that bothers you or that suggests personal contact
with you.
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Never publish the specific dates, times and locations of field
trips to people who are not directly entitled to such information
or to public forums where unknown persons might access the information.
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2) Unacceptable Sites and Materials |
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On a global network such as the Internet it is impossible to
effectively control the content of the information. On occasion,
users of online systems may encounter material that is controversial
and which other users, parents or staff might consider inappropriate
or offensive. It is the responsibility of the individual user
not to intentionally access such material. If such material
is accessed by accident, the incident must be reported immediately
to a teacher or appropriate authority.
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The Toronto District School Board is committed to meeting obligations
under the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms and the Ontario
Human Rights Code by providing safe schools and workplaces that
respect the rights of every individual. Discrimination and harassment
will not be tolerated. It is not acceptable to use online systems
to knowingly access sites, which contain material of a discriminatory
or harassing nature.
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Users of the TDSB Online systems will not knowingly access,
upload, download, store, display, distribute or publish any
information that:
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is illegal or that advocates illegal acts or facilitates
unlawful activity;
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threatens or intimidates any person or suggests violence,
hatred or discrimination toward other people;
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uses inappropriate and/or abusive language or conduct;
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contains inappropriate religious or political messages;
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violates or infringes the rights of any other person according
to the Toronto District School Board policies, Ministry
of Education policies, the Ontario Human Rights Code, or
the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms;
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is racially, culturally or religiously offensive;
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encourages the use of controlled substances, participation
in an illegal act or uses the system to incite criminal
actions;
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is of a defamatory, abusive, obscene, profane, pornographic
or sexually explicit nature;
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contains personal information , images, or signatures of
individuals without their prior informed consent;
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constitutes messages of sexual harassment or which contains
inappropriate romantic overtones;
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solicits any users on behalf of any business or commercial
organization without appropriate authorization;
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supports bulk mail, junk mail or "spamming";
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propagates chain letters, or other e-mail debris;
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attempts to hide, disguise or misrepresent the identity
of the sender.
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3) Use Guidelines |
All users of TDSB online systems will do the following: |
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Keep use of online services within reasonable limits in terms
of time and volume of information transferred through the system.
Excessive use of the system may disrupt services for all users
(e.g. sending mass mailings of large documents or transferring
large files at times of peak system usage).
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Report to an appropriate authority any harm to the system or
to information on the system whether that harm has been caused
accidentally or intentionally.
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4) Prohibited Uses and Activities |
All users of TDSB online systems will not do the following: |
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Copy, download, install or run viruses or other inappropriate
or unauthorized materials such as games, files, scripts, fonts,
or dynamic link libraries (DLL’s) from any source.
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Cause damage to any computer(s) and/or equipment including,
but not limited to computer hardware, furniture, projectors,
connectors, keyboards, storage devices (e.g. disk drives), and
pointing devices (e.g. mice).
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Damage or erase files or information belonging to any person
without authorization.
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Use any other person’s account on the system.
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Cause any user to lose access to the system - for example,
by disabling accounts or changing passwords without authorization.
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Open a computer case, move a computer, tamper with computer
cables or connections without proper authorization.
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Attach unauthorized devices to a computer or network. Such
devices include but are not limited to portable computers, disk
drives, protocol analyzers, and other electronic or mechanical
devices. Move, copy, or modify any of the system files or settings
on any computer, server or other device without proper authorization.
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Compromise themselves or others by unauthorized copying of
information, work or software belonging to others, encouraging
others to abuse the computers or network, displaying, transferring
or sharing inappropriate materials. Software pirating and unauthorized
copying of material belonging to others is regarded as theft.
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Copy, transfer or use files, programs or any other information
belonging to the TDSB for any reason whatever unless the licensing
specifically permits such actions.
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Attempt to subvert the TDSB networks by breaching security
measures, hacking accessing records without authorization or
any other type of disruption.
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Take the ideas, writings or images of others and present them
as if they were yours. Under copyright laws, all information
remains the property of the creator(s)/author(s) and therefore
permission is required for its use. The use of copyright materials
without permission can result in legal action.
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5) Consequences |
Inappropriate use of online access by students and staff could
result in disciplinary action that may include legal action and/or
involvement of police. |
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6) Online Publishing |
Information published on the Internet or Intranet can reach millions
of people who are mostly unknown to the original publishers. For
this reason, it is important to regulate information that is published
through the facilities of the Toronto District School Board. |
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The electronic publication of information using the facilities
of the TDSB is subject to all TDSB policies and guidelines.
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Links from a Toronto District Board site to outside sites must
be carefully selected and are subject to the same standards
of content quality as TDSB sites.
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A means of contacting the publisher of any collection of information
(such as a Web site) must be clearly identified on the opening
screen of the collection.
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The information published online must be kept current and
accurate with no conscious attempt to mislead the reader.
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Personal information such as personal addresses, phone numbers,
individual or group pictures, or signatures cannot be published
without express informed permission according to TDSB procedures.
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For the safety of our students, schools or departments must
NOT publish specific dates, times and locations of future field
trips.
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The appropriate school or department administrator is responsible
for ensuring that all work published is original or has been
cleared for copyright with the originator and ownership of the
copyright is clearly indicated.
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Advertising on any TDSB related electronic publication is subject
to the approval of the appropriate supervisory officer.
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All Web pages posted to the Internet must be linked to the
official central site of the Toronto District School Board.
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All Web pages hosted on the TDSB corporate site or paid for
by the TDSB are considered property of the TDSB.
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7) Liability |
The Toronto District School Board makes no warranties of any
nature or kind, expressed or implied, regarding its online services
or resources, the continued operation of these services, the equipment
and facilities used and their capacities, or the suitability, operability
and safety of any program or file posted on TDSB systems for any
intended purpose. |
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Code
of Online Conduct available in .pdf format (4 pages 61k)
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