Stanford University SUNet ID
Overview
The SUNet ID is an account name that identifies you, uniquely and permanently, as a member of the Stanford community. It is recorded in Stanford business systems, and is visible to University employees. It's what you'll use to log into most secure network services via Mac/PC-Leland or Weblogin. Your SUNet ID and password identify you to the network; your access to specific network services is determined by your eligibility and authority.
Ownership of a SUNet ID is governed by University policy as expressed in Administrative Guide 64.
Choosing a SUNet ID
Your SUNet ID is:
- permanently assigned to you. Once you've claimed a SUNet ID, it will never be reassigned. You cannot easily abandon a SUNet ID and open another.
- not private. You can control whether it is displayed in Stanford's online directory, and you can create an alias to use as your email address, but your actual SUNet ID will remain visible in University business systems and reports, and may be requested as an identifier by University staff.
- not anonymous. Your SUNet ID is directly associated with you—unlike a chat-room ID or Hotmail address that may mask your identity.
As your relationship with Stanford changes—through graduation, employment, retirement, and even death—the status of your SUNet ID will change from active to inactive and back, but your SUNet ID itself will not change.
This means that a great many SUNet IDs are reserved without currently being active. In addition, StanfordYou allows you to create 2 SUNet ID aliases, to use as alternate email/web addresses. Once an alias becomes inactive, it is reserved for at least 2 years, during which time it can be re-used only by its original owner.
As a result, you may be required to select a SUNet ID that is not your first choice, even though the one you want may not be currently in use.
Don't let your frustration with not getting the SUNet ID you want lead you to select one you'll later regret. Choose one you'll be confident to say aloud to your manager, professor, or colleagues.
We understand that you cannot foresee life changes that may make your SUNet ID inappropriate after the fact. Therefore, in extremely rare cases a request to change a SUNet ID may be approved. Changing a SUNet ID requires substantial effort from several different campus offices, and can result in disruption of your services during the transition.
Services
The following table lists the Stanford network services to which your SUNet ID may give you access (depending on your eligibility). Services are grouped into "full" and "base" packages.
| University-eligible | Sponsored | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Services | full | base | full | base |
| SUNet ID (login ID) |
+ | + | + | + |
| directory listing in StanfordWho |
+ | + | + | + |
| email service An @stanford.edu email address and mailbox on Stanford's mail servers; email aliases, forwarding and auto-reply services; web-based access to your email. |
+ | + | ||
| Web service |
+ | + | ||
| Sundial calendar |
+ | + | ||
| AFS storage space |
+ | + | ||
| usenet newsgroups |
+ | + | ||
| email list service |
+ | + | ||
| free or discounted software |
+ | |||
Eligibility
Once you have a SUNet ID and password, you may be eligible for a package of Stanford network services that includes email, AFS, and web service. Services may be turned on or off as your eligibility changes.
There are two types of eligibility for SUNet services:
- University-eligible: you automatically receive services because of your status at the University
- Sponsored: an authorized University employee has agreed to extend services to you for a fixed period of time
See the Sponsorship service page for more information.
Service "packages" are defined as:
- Base
- SUNet ID (login ID)
- directory listing in Stanford.Who
(more about what you can do with base services, below)
- Full (sponsored) = base services plus:
- email service
- Web service
- AFS storage space
- usenet newsgroups
- dial-in modems
- email list service
- Full (University-eligible) = all above services plus:
- free or discounted software
The following table shows the service package(s) for which each status is eligible:
| University-eligible | Sponsored | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Status | full | base | full | base |
| + | ||||
| + | * | |||
| + | ||||
| + | ||||
| + | * | |||
| + | * | |||
| + | ||||
| * | * | |||
* People in these categories can be sponsored for the service level indicated, as long as a Stanford employee with financial expenditure authority agrees to sponsor them.
If you have a SUNet ID, but are neither University-eligible for services nor sponsored for a service package, your SUNet ID is considered inactive and can't be used for anything.
Base services
The base service level means that you have an entry in the Stanford directory (StanfordWho) and can be recognized and identified by your SUNet ID and password. Individual services may grant you access based on your identity. At a minimum, you can:
- login to Axess (if you are a recent alumni)
- login to StanfordYou to maintain your contact information for your directory listing
- login via WebLogin to any protected web site that includes your SUNet ID in the "require user" list in its .htaccess file
Examples of some of the things you can (and cannot) do with a base-level SUNet ID:
- Recent alumni (for 5 years after graduation) can log into axess.stanford.edu to request a transcript or change their address. No sponsorship required.
- If your SUNet ID is listed in the .htaccess file of a secure Stanford web site, you'll be able to log into that web site via your browser. Sponsorship may be required, if you're not otherwise eligible for base service.
- You cannot maintain your own Stanford web site, or FTP files to any Stanford web site, regardless of the access control lists (ACLs) for that web site.
- If someone grants a temporary employee authority to do tasks in Oracle Financial Systems, that person will be able to to log into Oracle Financials. No sponsorship required.
- If someone grants a regular employee authority to do tasks in Oracle Financial Systems after that person leaves Stanford (rare, but possible), that person will be able to to log into Oracle Financials until that authority expires. Sponsorship required.
Authority
A person with a SUNet ID can be assigned authority to do specific tasks in Stanford's business systems. This authority is independent of that person's eligibility for network services.
For example, a temporary staff person who is eligible only for a base-level SUNet ID might be granted authority to do some registration tasks in PeopleSoft Student Administration. That temp staffer would not have Stanford email or other services that come with a full SUNet ID, but would be able to log into PeopleSoft SA to do their work.
For more information about authority and how it is managed at Stanford, see the Authority Manager page.



