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Employee Handbook and Policy Quick Reference2023.4
This is an abridged version of Tuna's security policy that all workforce members are required to be familiar with and comply with.
You are assumed to have read and fully understood the corporate security and privacy policies, standards, guidelines, controls and procedures even if you haven’t. So, it’s probably best you still go through the whole thing at some point.
- You are required to follow detailed procedures defined in certain policies related to your job role.
Security is everyone's responsibility. If this is not your first job, don’t do anything that might get you in trouble at your previous workplace. When in doubt, stop and ask.
!!! check "Acknowledgement"
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TrainingYou will be prompted as part of onboarding, and periodically going forward, to complete the following security training:
General security policy and procedures training, including
Ongoing security awareness training (a monthly series, currently provided by Whalemate)
Role-based security training
all members of the Development/Engineering team must carefully review the following policies and procedures
all members of the Administrative, Marketing and Procurement teams must review the following policies and procedures
all members of the Administrative and Senior Leadership/Executive teams must review the following policies and procedures
all members of the HR and Facilities teams must review the following policies and procedures
all team members responsible for Product Management and Business Development must review the following policies and procedures
all members of the Security, Compliance and IT teams must review all policies and procedures in its entirety
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Acceptable use policy for end-user computingTuna policy requires that:
(a) Per Tuna security architecture, all workforce members are primarily considered as remote users and therefore must follow all system access controls and procedures for remote access.
(b) Use of Tuna computing systems is subject to monitoring by Tuna IT and/or Security team.
(c) Employees may not leave computing devices (including laptops and smart devices) used for business purpose, including company-provided and BYOD devices, unattended in public.
(d) Device encryption must be enabled for all mobile devices accessing company data, such as whole-disk encryption for all laptops.
(e) Use only legal, approved software with a valid license. Do not use personal software for business purposes and vice versa.
(f) Encrypt all email messages containing sensitive or confidential data.
(g) Employees may not post any sensitive or confidential data in public forums or chat rooms. If a posting is needed to obtain technical support, data must be sanitized to remove any sensitive or confidential information prior to posting.
(h) Anti-malware or equivalent protection and monitoring must be installed and enabled on all endpoint systems that are commonly affected by malware, including workstations, laptops and servers.
(i) All data storage devices and media must be managed according to the Tuna Data Classification specifications and Data Handling procedures.
(j) Mobile devices are not allowed to connect directly to Tuna production environments.
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Your responsibilities for computing devicesTuna provides company-issued laptops and workstations to all employees. Tuna currently does not require or support employees bringing their own computing devices.
The laptops and/or workstations assigned to you are yours to configure and manage according to company security policy and standards. You are responsible to
configure the system to meeting the configuration and management requirements, including password policy, screen protection timeout, host firewall, etc.;
ensure the required anti-malware protection and security monitoring agent is installed and running; and
install the latest security patches timely or enable auto-update.
IT and Security provides automated scripts for end-user system configurations and/or technical assistance as needed.
You are also responsible for maintaining a backup copy of the business files local on your laptop/workstation to the appropriate location on Tuna file sharing / team site (e.g. SharePoint). Examples of business files include, but are not limited to:
- Documents (e.g. product specs, business plans)
- Presentations
- Reports and spreadsheets
- Design files/images/diagrams
- Meeting notes/recordings
- Important records (e.g. approval notes)
!!! important
Unless the local workstation/device has access to Critical data, backups of user workstations/devices are self managed by the device owner. Backups may be stored on an external hard drive or using a cloud service such as iCloud if and only if the data is both encrypted and password protected (passwords must meet Tuna requirements).
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Getting helpSupport for most of our business applications are self-service, such as password reset via Keycloak.
If needed, users may use our internal service desk to request IT and Security support. Common requests include:
- Password reset and access requests
- Request new software and hardware
- Technical support
- Recommend changes to policies and processes
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How to report an incident or suspicious activityYou are responsible to report all suspicious activities and security-related incidents immediately to the Information Security team, by one of the following channels:
(preferred) “Report a security incident” by creating an issue on Jira and/or via the [internal help desk](](mailto:security@tuna.uy)
For non-sensitive, non-confidential security issues and concerns, employees may post questions on Tuna’s #infosec Slack channel.
Additionally, employees may report the incident to their direct manager.
To report a concern under the Whistleblower Policy, you may first discuss the concerns with your immediate manager, or report it directly to the CEO or COO. See the Whistleblower Policy section in the HR Security Policy for additional details.