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Members of the University community are prohibited from using University computer resources for commercial purposes. Campus-based organizations claiming national or regional status must use non-University electronic resources, including Internet access, for non-Princeton activities.
Electronic mail or World Wide Web or newsgroup solicitation for fund-raising, even non-profit, also is prohibited.
If you link to a commercial site from your Princeton University personal web page, you must take care not to do so in a manner that suggests the commercial site has the endorsement or support of the University.
University departments and groups that are authorized to conduct certain kinds of commerce and who take credit card information over the campus network or Internet, must comply with University policies and other standards related to such e-commerce.
If you maintain an outside website (.org, .net, .com, or other) that you wish to redirect to a Princeton University web page, you must do so in a manner that will not suggest the University sponsors, endorses, or otherwise supports the outside site. If an outside contractor maintains a website that you want to appear to be a Princeton University website, you must obtain approval from the Office of the General Counsel.
If you maintain an outside website that you want to present or otherwise identify as a Princeton University website or affiliate, special authorization is needed. This normally requires review by the Office of the General Counsel. The same is true if you want to create a website internal to Princeton that is intended to represent an outside group or activity unaffiliated with the University. In this latter case, the group or sponsoring organization also must agree. Examples
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