Email Legal and Ethical Issues


Adhere to NC State IT Rules, Regulations and Procedures.

Don’t share your account or your password with anyone.
If you give someone else access to your account, you are breaching security, and you could be held liable for offenses you did not commit. Protect your account by changing your password at least annually and by using passwords that are not easily guessed. See Unity Credentials for more details.

Don’t violate copyright laws
Be careful not to duplicate and send copyrighted material without the permission of the copyright holder.

Don’t send abusive or defamatory messages
Laws relating to written communication also apply to email messages. This includes the laws relating to defamation, obscenity, fraudulent misrepresentation, freedom of information, and wrongful discrimination.

Report abusive or defamatory messages
If you receive an email that you feel is overly annoying, harassing, or abusive, save it and report the incident to the NC State Help Desk.

Remember that your email messages are NOT private
It’s easy for someone to forward your message to someone else, so be careful about what you write. Be aware that anyone, anywhere with an email account could potentially read your message.

Respect the privacy of other people’s email

Verify suspicious or alarming messages

Check with the sender if you have any doubt about the authenticity of a message. Before you forward a disturbing or alarming message, check online to see if it may be a hoax. 

Don’t send chain letters

Chain letters annoy most users, waste technical resources and are potentially illegal.

Don’t interfere with the system

Don’t knowingly disrupt university electronic mail and other services. Don’t knowingly interfere with other people’s use of email.