Penn is committed to preeminence in research, teaching, and service. As a result, Penn owns significant assets in the form of information. Penn’s informational assets include, but are not limited to, student education records, employment records, financial information, research data, protected health information, alumni and donor information, Penn operational data, Penn intellectual property, and other data relating to Penn’s infrastructure, technology resources, and information security. The improper use of such information, the unauthorized or inadvertent disclosure, alteration or destruction of information assets, or a significant interruption in their availability, can disrupt Penn’s ability to fulfill its mission. Such actions can also result in regulatory, legal, financial and/or reputational risk to Penn and to the individuals whose data Penn maintains.
All members of the Penn community have a responsibility to help ensure that Penn’s information assets are used only in the proper pursuit of the University’s mission and that the confidentiality, integrity, and availability of Penn’s information is maintained, regardless of where it is processed or stored. All members of the Penn community have an obligation to appropriately use and protect information in a manner that is respectful of personal privacy. Members of the Penn community also must use and protect information in compliance with applicable laws.
The Information Security program and Privacy program described below are charged with assisting and supporting members of the Penn community in meeting these responsibilities and strengthening accountability.
The Information Systems and Computing (ISC) Information Security program is charged with overseeing University efforts to preserve the confidentiality, integrity, and availability of Penn’s digital assets, the University network, systems, and data. This includes coordinating School and Center security-related activities, developing and implementing proactive technical and non-technical measures to help detect and prevent security risks, establishing policy, standards, and guidance, and providing an effective incident response when necessary.
The University Information Security Officer is responsible for overseeing the ISC Information Security program.
The Vice President of Information Technology (IT) & University Chief Information Officer (CIO) is responsible for identifying and delegating the responsibility for information security, for approving security policies, standards and guidelines, overseeing incident response as necessary, and reporting periodically to senior University administration and the Board of Trustees on matters of Information Security.
The Office of Audit, Compliance, and Privacy (OACP) University Privacy program is responsible for developing an overall privacy framework to:
- Establish governance, implementation and accountability structures across the University with respect to privacy
- Ensure compliance with federal and state privacy laws as well as Penn’s privacy-related policies and procedures
- Raise awareness about privacy risks and how to mitigate those risks; 4) and provide an effective incident response when necessary
The University Privacy Officer is responsible for overseeing the OACP University Privacy program.
The Associate Vice President for Audit Compliance and Privacy is responsible for identifying and delegating the responsibility for implementation of the University Privacy program, providing a senior-level review of privacy-related policies and key privacy initiatives, overseeing incident response as necessary, and reporting periodically to senior University administration and the Board of Trustees on matters involving University Privacy.
Schools and Centers are responsible for establishing local Security and Privacy mechanisms to ensure compliance with University policies and guidelines, protect data, systems, and networks, implement security and privacy-related controls, and to cooperate with the Office of Information Security and the Office of Privacy in responding to incidents.
The Information Security program and the Privacy program maintain strong relationships with the Office of General Counsel, Division of Public Safety, Information Systems and Computing, the Office of Audit, Compliance, and Privacy, the Provost and EVP offices, the Office of Student Conduct, and many other offices handling confidential University data. These partners are essential to the provision of information security services and privacy protections to the Penn community.