privacy
For teaching purposes, the University of Florence guidance says personal or confidential data must never be supplied or disseminated through prompting, file uploads, or credential sharing.
Change log
Release-to-release tracker diff with separate policy-text, newly-extracted claim, evidence, and source snapshot categories.
Current public record freshness and review state.
University of Florence currently has 5 source-backed claim records and 2 official source attributions. Latest tracked changed date: May 16, 2026. No tracker diff rows are recorded in the latest public release.
This tracker is not legal advice, not academic integrity advice, and not an official university statement unless a linked source is the university's own official page.
Newly extracted claims are tracker additions and are not necessarily newly published by the university. Source snapshot changes show hash changes for the same source URL and are not by themselves policy changes.
Semantic classification for this release diff.
Unified tracker diff generated from the previous and current public release snapshots.
No tracker claim/evidence/source changes are recorded for this university in the latest public release.
5 claim records
For teaching purposes, the University of Florence guidance says personal or confidential data must never be supplied or disseminated through prompting, file uploads, or credential sharing.
The University of Florence guidance says students may use AI only for purposes and modes explicitly indicated by the instructor for the course activity; if the instructor gives no indication, AI use for the required course activity is not permitted.
The University of Florence has issued AI guidance for teaching and study activities, with the rectoral decree stating that the guidance is emanated and the governance extract recording favorable action on adoption.
The University of Florence guidance treats improper reliance on AI to avoid student responsibility as an academic integrity issue and says presenting work made entirely or largely by generative AI as one's own is plagiarism.
Under the University of Florence AI teaching/study guidance, instructors may set course-level policies authorizing or prohibiting AI tool use, while remaining within the general principles in the guidance.
2 source attributions
official_pdf Tracker checked at May 16, 2026, 7:27 PM
official_pdf Tracker checked at May 16, 2026, 7:23 PM