The University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston (UTMB) promotes
and supports the use of the Internet and Internet applications to inform
the global community about the services and operation of UTMB and to
provide support to university personnel in the administration of
programs. UTMB places conditions and guidelines on the use of the
Internet, Internet resources and Internet applications on computer
systems and facilities that are the property of UTMB.
The purpose of these guidelines is to provide specific information to
campus users of these Internet resources.
Several principles underlie UTMB’s guidelines regarding access to and
publication on the Internet. The university upholds an individual's
constitutional right to freedom of speech and the faculty’s right to
academic freedom. The authors of these guidelines appreciate the spirit
in which the web was created and exists. UTMB also recognizes that
material created by its component departments, schools, clinical units,
labs and other official sources represent the university to audiences
within the institution and far beyond. In the creation of these
guidelines, a conscious effort has been made to foster good stewardship
of institutional assets and compliance with regulatory guidelines, while
promoting consistency, quality and a cohesive, unifying image for the
institution.
Guidelines for Users
As good stewards, all users of UTMB’s information resources
(including web access and email services), must act professionally and
with regard for others. Please refer to
http://cirt.utmb.edu/
Guidelines for Internet Publishers
Publishing on UTMB’s Internet Servers
UTMB maintains Internet servers that may be used by university
entities, departments, employees, students and registered organizations
for publishing information and creating applications related to their
roles at UTMB. Content on these pages must be in support of UTMB’s
mission of health care, education, research and community service, and
may be intended for internal use or be made available for public use.
Internet pages may not be used for commercial, non-UTMB purposes.
They cannot be for the personal or private gain of an individual or
group of individuals promoting a private or commercial cause.
Official UTMB Internet pages should not contain personal material not
directly relevant to the appropriate business of UTMB.
Faculty and Staff Development Pages
In limited instances, UTMB will host non-UTMB sites that align with
the university’s mission areas. This service is offered in support of
faculty and staff development, and as a community service targeted at
not-for-profit groups promoting or involved in the delivery or support
of health. Other conditions apply: the owner and publisher of the
requested site must be a student or employee associated with the group,
and the site must be officially endorsed or sponsored in writing by a
UTMB department.
The UTMB Home Page
www.utmb.edu is the official
Internet site ("home page") for the university. The home page’s primary
objective is to provide an attractive, distinctive, clear and easily
navigable point-of-entry to the wealth of information on UTMB’s Internet
servers, and to set a tone and style for other university pages.
An alternate internal home page for employees and students, iUTMB, is
also offered and maintained by the university. Information on this
resource, including a mechanism to request links, in available on the
page. intranet.utmb.edu
or www.utmb.edu/iutmb/
The UTMB main home page and iUTMB are managed by the Web Advisory
Board, in collaboration with the
Office of University Advancement,
Information Services and Academic
Resources.
Responsibilities of publishers
Publishers of pages on UTMB’s Internet servers are responsible for:
-
ensuring the accuracy and timeliness of the information presented;
-
offering readers pages that represent professional design and quality presentation;
-
abiding by UTMB’s web publishing and
identity standards, and complying with applicable
State of Texas web requirements;
-
regularly updating and keeping published information current;
-
understanding and complying with copyright, privacy,
intellectual
property and libel laws; and
-
responding in a timely fashion to inquiries and comments directed at
one’s published material.
Although significant efforts are made to ensure the reliability of
the information presented, the university cannot guarantee the complete
accuracy and dependability of all the information stored on or retrieved
from its Internet servers.
Web pages that give access to or collect any personal, confidential
or sensitive data must contain protection from unauthorized access,
incorporating security measures into their design. All pages are
required to post a link to the university’s
privacy policy.
Pages hosted on UTMB web servers and posted by UTMB web publishers
should be “generally accessible”
as defined by the State of Texas.
Web pages, especially those intended for public review, should load quickly,
feature “alt tags,” text-based representations and other features to
make the content available to the visually impaired.
UTMB Internet publishers linked to the university’s home pages
represent the institution and are responsible for the pages they
publish, as well as the links they offer to other resources. Page
publishers should not be directing their visitors to non-operative
sites, to out-of-date sites, or to sites containing irrelevant or
inappropriate content. Content providers and page publishers are
expected to abide by the highest standards of quality and
responsibility.
Initiating a Web Site at UTMB/Requesting a Link
Requests to publish a web site on a UTMB server or post a link from the official home page should be sent to IS Enterprise Systems.
Site Names Generally, new sites hosted on UTMB’s two institutional
servers are hosted as &quo;www.utmb.edu/name&quo;.
A few large sites on our main servers are or can be set up as virtual
webs; they function, and are named, like independent sites running
within the same web server. In those cases, &quo;www&quo;
subdomain is dropped from the name. Examples:
gsbs.utmb.edu,
shp.utmb.edu
This &quo;virtual web&quo; name model requires a distinct IP address;
requests are reviewed and fulfilled on a case-by-case basis, and require
a bit of extra time.
All other web servers operated within the UTMB domain should follow
the “sitename.utmb.edu” model. Examples:
registrar.utmb.edu,
library.utmb.edu,
nrcc.utmb.edu,
cardiology.utmb.edu
This naming convention increases consistency, yet still offers
flexibility and allow for an IT solution that accommodates current and
future scenarios with minimal impact or difficulty.
Required Elements for Sites Published from or Linked to UTMB
Internet Servers
The following elements need to be included on each official page
hosted on UTMB servers or linked to UTMB pages. A low-impact template
for a page footer
that meets these state and university requirements is
available.
-
The name and contact information of the primary “owner” of a web site
-
Copyright designation with identification/affiliation with UTMB and
link to UTMB home page. Example: Copyright © 2010
The University of Texas Medical Branch
-
A link to these guidelines, which describes the UTMB policies
regarding the web and contains an email address to which comments may be
sent
-
Date of creation or most recent revision of the document or site
-
State-required links
-
Link to UTMB’s privacy policy
In addition, pages must incorporate:
-
Basic, descriptive meta tags
(more info)
-
Consistent use of institutional marks, menus and other branding as
outlined in UTMB’s
Web Page Standards.
Guidelines for Web Site Solicitations
UT System rules and policies govern the use of solicitations,
sponsorships and advertising on the web sites of its component
institutions. A document,
UTS122 - Guidelines for Web Site Solicitation, is
available for information on this topic.
Compliance and Complaint Resolution Process
Fundamentally, these guidelines rely on personal responsibility and
professionalism on the part of web publishers. Admittedly, the very
nature of this technology makes enforcement a challenge. For these
guidelines to function as intended and to advance the aims of the
institution, each publisher must take personal and collective
responsibility for what is produced.
Pages are evaluated for compliance at the time they are initially
linked, and are subject to random review thereafter. Log file analysis
plays a large role in the review process; UTMB pages with high traffic
volume are a priority. Review is a task charged jointly to Information
Services and the Office of University Advancement.
Missing or improperly executed elements will result in a contact from
a representative of the Web Advisory Board. If corrective measures are
not taken within an agreed upon time, the institutional link will be
severed and web server privileges may be forfeited.
Communication is critical in conflict resolution. It is the board's
desire that peer direction and support help drive compliance. When and
if warranted, the Web Advisory Board will offer a first line of
arbitration in conflict resolution.
The Internet offers publishers a tremendous amount of freedom and
power, but these come at a price: a responsibility to exercise good
judgment. The penalties for not exercising good judgment and abiding
by these guidelines can include the suspension or withdrawal of UTMB
Internet server use privileges. Violations of state and federal laws can
lead to suspension, dismissal and/or criminal and civil prosecution.
UTMB Web Support
UTMB offers and will continue to offer training and resources
supporting the use of the Internet, Internet applications, and web
development to university employees and students.
These guidelines are the result of the work and oversight of the
UTMB Web Advisory Board. The charge of the board is to enhance the
quality and effectiveness of the institution’s World Wide Web presence
and to promote and optimize the web’s use as a communication tool.
The board, which is multidisciplinary and cross-representational,
was created by and operates under the direction of the UTMB President’s
Council.