Change log

University of Malta

Source-backed change history with no release-to-release policy diff rows recorded yet; current claims, official sources, review state, and freshness remain visible across 0 public release records.

Change summary

Current public record freshness and review state.

University of Malta currently has 6 source-backed claim records and 3 official source attributions. Latest tracked changed date: May 18, 2026. No tracker diff rows are recorded in the latest public release.

This page combines all public release diffs for University of Malta. Individual release snapshots remain available from their release-specific URLs.

No release-to-release policy diff rows are recorded for this university yet. The page still tracks current source-backed claims, official source attributions, review state, source freshness, and public JSON for discovery and citation.

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.

Diff categories

Semantic classification for this release diff.

Policy text0Newly extracted0Evidence0Source snapshots0Source text0Source added0Source removed0

Combined release diff

Unified tracker diff generated from all public release snapshots for this university.

University of Malta combined release diff

Initial tracked release. Lines represent public claim/evidence records entering the release snapshot.

+12-0
11 # University of Malta AI policy record
2+academic_integrity: University of Malta guidance says unacknowledged work generated by AI tools is considered plagiarised work.
3+Evidence (en, 558b670f27aa): For the avoidance of doubt, the use of unacknowledged work generated by AI tools is also considered by the University as plagiarised work.
4+ai_tool_treatment: University of Malta student FAQ guidance tells students to check with their tutor before using Generative AI tools to produce answers in summative assessments.
5+Evidence (en, 558b670f27aa): Before you start working on materials submitted for assessment, you are required to check with your tutor if Generative AI tools can be used to produce answers in summative assessments.
6+teaching: University of Malta academic-staff guidelines say lecturers decide if and how Generative AI is permitted in a study-unit; if assessment instructions do not mention Generative AI, use is assumed not allowed except for listed support uses.
7+Evidence (en, 456b8c84c944): it is up to the individual lecturers, in consultation with the Board of Examiners and/or the Board of Studies, as appropriate, to determine if and how the use of Generative AI tools should be permitted within a given study-unit. If no specific mention is made regarding the use of Generative AI tools in the study-unit assessment guidelines and instructions that are made available to students through the VLE, then it is assumed that the use of these tools is not allowed except for the modalities indicated in Guideline 6.
8+academic_integrity: University of Malta academic-staff guidelines discourage use of AI writing detection tools at this stage and state that Generative AI detection software cannot be used as proof for disciplinary procedures.
9+Evidence (en, 456b8c84c944): the use of any AI writing detection tools within UM is discouraged given the unreliability of Generative AI detection software. Besides the detection accuracy concerns mentioned earlier, the students have not given their permission to upload their work to tools other than Turnitin or agreed on how their data will be stored.
10+privacy: University of Malta academic-staff guidelines warn staff to be especially careful not to include sensitive information in prompts to Generative AI tools because of privacy and data-protection concerns.
11+Evidence (en, 456b8c84c944): All University staff should be especially careful not to include any sensitive information in their prompts to these tools due to issues related to privacy and data protection.
12+academic_integrity: For the Faculty of Media & Knowledge Sciences, University of Malta guidance says students who use Generative AI should copy every prompt or query in chronological order in an appendix to their work, subject to study-unit requirements.
13+Evidence (en, 5a6c5256ee33): Copy every prompt or query you give to a generative AI model (in chronological order) in an appendix to your work. Generally, there is no need to include the actual output of the AI model, only the prompts or queries.

Release history

0 public release diffs

Claim changes

6 claim records

academic_integrity

For the Faculty of Media & Knowledge Sciences, University of Malta guidance says students who use Generative AI should copy every prompt or query in chronological order in an appendix to their work, subject to study-unit requirements.

Review: Agent reviewedConfidence88%Evidence1Languagesen

privacy

University of Malta academic-staff guidelines warn staff to be especially careful not to include sensitive information in prompts to Generative AI tools because of privacy and data-protection concerns.

Review: Agent reviewedConfidence90%Evidence1Languagesen

academic_integrity

University of Malta academic-staff guidelines discourage use of AI writing detection tools at this stage and state that Generative AI detection software cannot be used as proof for disciplinary procedures.

Review: Agent reviewedConfidence91%Evidence1Languagesen

teaching

University of Malta academic-staff guidelines say lecturers decide if and how Generative AI is permitted in a study-unit; if assessment instructions do not mention Generative AI, use is assumed not allowed except for listed support uses.

Review: Agent reviewedConfidence92%Evidence1Languagesen

ai_tool_treatment

University of Malta student FAQ guidance tells students to check with their tutor before using Generative AI tools to produce answers in summative assessments.

Review: Agent reviewedConfidence93%Evidence1Languagesen

academic_integrity

University of Malta guidance says unacknowledged work generated by AI tools is considered plagiarised work.

Review: Agent reviewedConfidence94%Evidence1Languagesen

Source snapshots

3 source attributions