Compliance with the Higher Education Opportunity Act (HEOA)
Peer-to-Peer File Sharing Requirements
Introduction: The Higher Education Opportunity Act (HEOA) was signed into law on August 14, 2008. Final regulations were issued October 29, 2009 which included three general requirements:
- An annual disclosure to students describing copyright law and campus policies related to violating copyright law
- A plan to "effectively combat the unauthorized distribution of copyrighted materials" by users of its network, including "the use of one or more technology-based deterrents"
- A plan to "offer alternatives to illegal downloading"
Annual Disclosure: Listed below are the a variety of methods we use to inform our community about the law and Longwood's response to copyright infringement claims:
- In order to use University IT Resources and Systems, all members of the Longwood Community endorse an Acceptable Use Policy which includes a section on copyright compliance.
- During orientation, first year students are presented with information on Longwood IT Resources and Systems, which include an introduction to our Acceptable Use Policy as well as specifics on copyright infringement and peer-to-peer file sharing.
- Each year, faculty and staff receive Security Awareness Training which includes information about downloading music and peer-to-peer file sharing.
- Longwood's procedures concerning the Digital Millennium Copyright Act and our response to infringement claims are published on Longwood's website.
- Stories are placed in the Information Security Newsletter and flyers are posted in student computer labs and elsewhere to discourage illegal file sharing.
- Copy Share Cats (.pdf)
Plans to "Effectively Combat" the Unauthorized Distribution of Copyrighted Material: Longwood University currently uses a
Bluecoat PacketShaper
to manage bandwidth usage on campus. P2P applications are grouped together and given limited bandwidth.
The University responds to all Digital Millennium Copyright Act notices according to procedures published on our website:
www.longwood.edu/infosec/heoa/response.htm
Offering Alternatives to Illegal File Sharing: EDUCAUSE maintains a list of all known legitimate download services. Their list is available at:
http://www.educause.edu/legalcontent
Reviewing Effectiveness: Our Policy, Awareness and Training Coordinator intends to review our plan annually to assess effectiveness and consider improvements. Starting in the fall of 2010, we plan to leverage the reporting features of iSupport to measure the frequency of DMCA incidents as an indicator of effectiveness.
