privacy
UWA Library ethical guidance says users should never upload the University's intellectual property into a generative AI tool unless explicitly instructed to do so.
Change log
Release-to-release tracker diff with separate policy-text, newly-extracted claim, evidence, and source snapshot categories.
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The University of Western Australia currently has 11 source-backed claim records and 9 official source attributions. Latest tracked changed date: May 13, 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.
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No tracker claim/evidence/source changes are recorded for this university in the latest public release.
11 claim records
UWA Library ethical guidance says users should never upload the University's intellectual property into a generative AI tool unless explicitly instructed to do so.
UWA research-writing guidance says authors are responsible for ensuring inputs to AI tools are suitable for uploading and processing and that use complies with copyright, privacy, ethics, data-sensitivity policies, and legislation.
UWA research-writing guidance states that AI and other machine-learning language models cannot be authors, and authors should transparently disclose when and how they used them.
UWA has blocked DeepSeek services on UWA-managed devices and networks because of concerns about the safety and security of data shared with DeepSeek's online services.
UWA's 2026 student AI guide says students should not enter personal data or information into public AI systems.
UWA askUWA guidance tells students to reference all AI-generated content used in assessments and says they may be asked to show the AI tools and prompts used.
UWA askUWA guidance says limited AI editorial tools may be used for broad editorial assistance in a student's own writing, and the student remains responsible for judging whether suggestions are accurate and appropriate.
UWA's Academic Integrity Policy includes using material generated by Artificial Intelligence, including generative AI and related tools, in assessments as a type of plagiarism.
For UWA assessments assigned Tier 1, students are not permitted to use AI in any way to complete the assessment, and any AI use during that Tier 1 assessment is treated as academic misconduct.
UWA student assessment guidance describes three AI-use tiers that lecturers may apply to assessment tasks: Tier 1 no AI, Tier 2 AI assistance or collaboration, and Tier 3 fully embedded AI.
For UWA coursework assessments, AI tools may only be used where the Unit Coordinator explicitly permits them; permitted use must be cited, referenced, and clearly acknowledged.
9 source attributions
official_pdf Tracker checked at May 13, 2026, 4:55 AM
official_guidance Tracker checked at May 13, 2026, 4:54 AM
official_guidance Tracker checked at May 13, 2026, 4:54 AM
official_guidance Tracker checked at May 13, 2026, 4:52 AM
official_policy_page Tracker checked at May 13, 2026, 4:56 AM
official_guidance Tracker checked at May 13, 2026, 4:52 AM
official_guidance Tracker checked at May 13, 2026, 4:53 AM
official_pdf Tracker checked at May 13, 2026, 4:50 AM
official_guidance Tracker checked at May 13, 2026, 4:48 AM