Purpose
Classifying your data helps you determine how your data should be accessed, handled, stored, and shared, as well as the risk associated with the data. This step allows you to determine which computational and storage solutions are best suited to your task, project, or backups.
Audience
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colour | Blue |
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title | researchers |
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colour | Red |
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title | Admin staff |
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colour | Purple |
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title | IT staff |
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On this page
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title | Expand to view table of contents. |
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minLevel | 1 |
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maxLevel | 3 | include4 |
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outline | false | indent |
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style | default |
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exclude | Purpose|Audience|On this page|Search|Additional help|Related articles |
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type | list | class |
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Initial considerations
Applicable legislation, regulations, policies, data sharing or material transfer agreements, etc.
Privacy legislation (FIPPA, PHIPA, GPDR, etc.)
Ethics protocols
Agreements (Data sharing [DSA], material sharing [MTA], etc.)
What can I do?
Consult the University’s Data Classification Standard.
Level 4
Level 3
Level 2
Level 1
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Name | Role | Date |
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Michael Laurentius | Author | | Sue McGlashan | Approver (Manager) | | | Reviewer | |
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