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Scientific Research Encountering More Restrictions

vab writes "MSNBC is running an article that details how the MIT AI Lab, the birth place of the free software movement, walked away from a $404K study because the government wanted to restrict participation by foreign students. The article talks about further restrictions the US Government is trying to impose in the name of homeland security and how other research institutions are reacting."

24 of 505 comments (clear)

  1. Foreign students by Uruk · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I'm glad MIT did the right thing and walked away from this study. It is although somewhat difficult to tell whether they did this out of a principled stand or if they did it simply because they have so many foreign students that they wouldn't be able to pull it off unless they used them. That quite possibly could be the case.

    There's no reason to believe that some college student from Hong Kong is a terrorist. Sure there are some terrorists out there, but I doubt they're sweating their midterms at some university. To deny foreigners the ability to work on some stuff isn't just slightly racist, it's outrageously stupid since there are some unbelievably bright people who come to the US from other places for school.

    In the financial services industry, most people have to be bonded - that is the FBI gets your fingerprints and they do some sort of rudimentary background check on you. Would that placate the "homeland security" wolves? At any rate, it would be more information on foreign students than they have on most Americans.

    Sometimes I think that homeland security is the process of a bunch of people staring at a collander and trying to decide which hole to patch first. Sure it's possible to keep the total morons from pullling off something big (or burning you in the same way they did before) but how many people out there really think that with anything less than a fascist state, it's possible to secure the country against someone whose well funded, clever, and out to get the US?

    --
    -- Truth goes out the door when rumor comes innuendo. -- Groucho Marx
    1. Re:Foreign students by Anne_Nonymous · · Score: 5, Informative

      >> It is although somewhat difficult to tell whether they did this out of a principled stand or if they did it simply because they have so many foreign students that they wouldn't be able to pull it off unless they used them.

      According to a nice inverview on NPR this morning, it was the principal of the thing.

      http://www.npr.org/programs/morning/index.html

      (I don't think there's a direct link yet this morning)

    2. Re:Foreign students by burNtchicken · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The trend is disturbing, and in one specific sense I think you're right. They're trying to patch holes, or alleviate symptons, instead of attacking the source of the problem. Is anyone in government asking what the source is?
      If a bunch of people are out to get the U.S., then why are they doing it? With all the anti-U.S. sentiment that I hear in some discussion groups, are we doing something wrong?
      It's not that we shouldn't patch holes in our security, because we should. It just seems to me that nobody is addressing the policies of our country which have made us a target. Maybe we're doing something wrong, and maybe we're not, but nobody in the government is bothering to ask.
      It's like we're the automatic moral authority.

    3. Re:Foreign students by plugger · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Very insightful, but when you say 'Maybe we're doing something wrong', you make the same mistake as those who hate Americans. You, and most of your compatriots, are doing nothing wrong. It's your government's policies which are causing anger abroad.

      I'm at work at the moment, so I won't explore the idea that apathetic populations are responsible for their government's excesses. That isn't a dig at the USA btw, I live in the UK and we're quickly catching up with your country's low voter turnout and general disinterest in the things done in our name.

    4. Re:Foreign students by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      You don't have to explore the idea. I know that populations are responsible for their government's policies. Unfortunately, while it can be attributed partially to apathy, there is a general feeling here that there is nothing we can do about our governments problems (ie. corruption, etc.) Like it's more or less too big and out of our control.

      I unfortunately, am just peeking out of my hole and beginning to educate myself on what I can do about the problems with my government. And I'd have to say it's rather intimidating, and I don't think most people are up to the task. Most of us feel free to bitch about our government, but not really do anything. Nobody really cares that much.

      I know personally that for most of my life I've been content to work to pay the bills, and screw off (Watch TV, play video games, go to a bar, whatever). Most people I know are the same. I've met a good amount of people in my life, and I don't know one person that does more than vote occasionally. Nobody even writes their representatives. I mean, I'm sure people do, but I've never met those people.

      In my, albiet limited, experience, the mindset of this country is not one of concern in how our country turns out, or what we can do to make sure that it stays a worthwhile place to live for ourselves, and future generations. The mindset is generally more selfish.

    5. Re:Foreign students by ErikZ · · Score: 5, Insightful


      What if it's because we're doing something RIGHT? What if by accepting the best and brightest from all over the world, we're leaving these heavily armed countries with the dregs of humanity?

      --
      Democrats or Republicans. They are both taking us to the same place and they are not afraid of us anymore.
    6. Re:Foreign students by irix · · Score: 5, Insightful

      If a bunch of people are out to get the U.S., then why are they doing it?

      The U.S. is the world's superpower. The only country with economic strength and the ability to project military power. People are going to hate you because:

      1. The U.S took the other side in some international dispute.
      2. They resent their culture being pushed aside by U.S. pop culture.
      3. They are jealous of the standard of living in the U.S.

      I think if you look you'll find that dislike of America boils down into one of those three categories. I am Canadian, and despite the fact that we have a theoretically higher standard of living, you'll find reason #2 is most likely why someone from Canada dislikes the U.S. - we know everything about American culture, they know nothing about ours.

      The problem is, when you are the world's superpower, it is hard to hide from these problems. Isolationisim was tried in the 1930s, but that didn't work out too well.

      Sure, the U.S. has made foreign policy mistakes - maybe even lots of them - but there aren't any magic solutions that will make this all go away.

      --

      Do you even know anything about perl? -- AC Replying to Tom Christiansen post.
  2. Case in point: by slalderma · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I was a grad student at Texas Tech until a few months ago and one of my prof.s had funding from US DOD to study dispersion of chem./bio. warfare agents. The project was multi-year and for 90% of the project, no foreign national was allowed to work on it. That was finally overturned, however, mainly because there weren't enough Americans to work on it.

    The project was new just before Sept. 11th and I'm not sure I can blame them for their restrictions at the time. I think they finally figured out that, at least in this case, it didn't matter who worked on the project. It wasn't going to propogate information about how to make delivery agents more effective, just how they interact with urban, rural, etc. environments.

    That and Lubbock isn't a hotbed for terrorists if you know what I mean. Cow-tippers, yes. Foreign spies, no.

  3. Bravo!!!! by byron150 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I for one congratulate MIT!!! It was a bold move to stand up to something as blatantly wrong as what the government was trying to do. Security must not be gained at the sacrifice of our morals. What does that say about us as a society, our nation who claims to lead all others in progressive thought. We welcomed these people to our land when no other country would take them. France gave us a statue embodying the princple. Now we want to send them away because we think all people of a race would also wish us harm. Extremists come from all races, and someday a white female American will do something terribly destructive which will result in the loss of thousands of lives. What will happen then? The government steps in and calms us down and tells us that we can't trust each other and will therefore take away every personal freedom we have in the name of making us secure? I'll spend a cold day in hell before I allow that to happen to me. So yeah, GO MIT!!!!

    --
    -Never believe in the end of something great, send it to sub-committee for further study!!! - ME
  4. This could be useful for tenure review by vaxer · · Score: 5, Funny
    I can see it now...

    The committee has noticed that you don't appear to have published any research in the last five years. Is that really so?

    Well, I could tell you, but then I'd have to kill you all.


    Yes, I've definitely got to get me one of them Real Genius grants.
  5. Really? by Izang · · Score: 5, Informative

    MSNBC says: "But the National Security Agency refused to budge from a requirement that any foreigners working on a planned project at MIT's Artificial Intelligence Laboratory be screened by the government in advance, forcing the school to turn down the money in September, Powell said." You say: "MSNBC is running an article that details how the MIT AI Lab, the birth place of the free software movement, walked away from a $404K study because the government wanted to restrict participation by foreign students." Sounds like they are just checking for ties to terrorists. Where does it say that foreign students are restricted from participating?

    1. Re:Really? by Rogerborg · · Score: 5, Informative

      restrict: To keep or confine within limits.

      Limit, not absolutely prohibit.

      NSA screening would deny access to some people based on the probability of them being or becoming hostile. What criteria would the NSA use to determine whether to label each student "potential terrorist"? Would that be open to scrutiny or appeal?

      Seems pretty limiting to me, at least in principle, and that's the position under discussion.

      --
      If you were blocking sigs, you wouldn't have to read this.
  6. RTFA by MeanMF · · Score: 5, Insightful

    But the National Security Agency refused to budge from a requirement that any foreigners working on a planned project at MIT's Artificial Intelligence Laboratory be screened by the government in advance

    They didn't want to restrict anybody from working on anything - they just wanted to run backround checks on non-citizens working on the projects. Is that really such a big deal??

  7. Re:In a post September 11, 2001 world... by mark_lybarger · · Score: 5, Insightful

    slow down there cowboy... when i grew up, i learned that people kill people. then somewhere along the way, that's been converted into guns kill people. and now you want us to believe that information kills people?

    i have got to get into a new line of work!

  8. You Take Someone's Money - You Take Their Strings by Aaron+M.+Renn · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The bottom line is that if you take someone's money - the government's, a corporation's, a foundation's, etc - you are implicitly or explicitly agreeing to the strings attached. Seldom is there a "free lunch". If there is money being offered, there is usually a reason why. I'm not entitled to have free money come raining down on me. Why should a wealthy institution like MIT? They know the game.

    If I offer the FSF a $20,000 grant to develop a "Foo" software package for me, provided they design it how I want, the FSF is certainly free to turn that money down and do their own thing (or do without a Foo package). But that doesn't make me an evil man for asking the FSF to write a program that meets my needs if I give them a donation to do so. Similarly for the government.

  9. In a related story by Alien54 · · Score: 5, Informative
    Theodore Postel is also winning some points on his concerns about technology snafus under the guise of national security. Check out this story:

    http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,3-530647,0 0.html

    • The Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) is considering an investigation into accusations that fundamental flaws in the proposed "Son of Star Wars" system have been covered up.

      After months of demanding an inquiry into the affair, Ed Crawley, the chairman of MIT's aeronautics and astronautics department, has reversed previous refusals and recommended an investigation.

      The issue in question goes to the heart of missile defence technology, an article of faith among many Republicans and a key plank in Mr Bush's 2000 presidential manifesto.

      Dr Postol and fellow critics say the ability of an interceptor missile to distinguish between an incoming warhead and the decoys likely to accompany it is deeply suspect. Any such doubts would cripple the credibility of the system.

    Again, all as a matter of national security, and which did not make a splash stateside. The story at the link is much more detailed.

    So what is the government going to do about this outbreak of integrity in the halls of learning?

    --
    "It is a greater offense to steal men's labor, than their clothes"
  10. Re:I can see why they'd walk away from it... by rovingeyes · · Score: 5, Insightful
    I am tired of Foriegn students coming to America and taking up spots in good Universities and Colleges that could go to Americans.

    You know why America still holds its place as a technological leader? Not becoz of just american researchers but a significant foreign nationals working in America, who wouldn't have that same oppurtunity in other countries. AFAIK, America's support for intelligence and research skills over nationality has let it remain supreme.

    I think we should close our borders to people who only want to go to school here, and then leave the country when they finish their education!

    Wrong again, most of the students who come here don't make plans to leave. They settle here. In my past 3.5 yrs in college I have seen 90% of foreign nationals do something or other to stay even overstay their visa time.

    Foriegn students are a big security risk! Their loyalties are always in question.

    Agreed, but solution is not to close borders. And again you cannot let people walk freely in and out just for the sake of technology or research. Its neither a one line solution nor can be found in a week. May be this is the risk we have to take for the sake of free economy otherwise we have to turn like those chinese closing down thousands of internet kiosks and putting restrictions on our citizens! Not good!

  11. Sounds familiar. by grub · · Score: 5, Insightful


    2003: You must use Americans for this important work.

    1941:You must use blonde haired, blue eyed Germans for this important work.

    --
    Trolling is a art,
  12. Re:This is A Good Thing by No+Such+Agency · · Score: 5, Insightful

    They are our guests, and they shouldn't expect that we give them the keys and the kitchen sink.

    No, it's more like "they're your guests, and you won't let them help you do the dishes because you're afraid they might steal the silverware, despite having no evidence at all to suggest they would". Yes, I'm stretching the metaphor but I feel it had to be said. "Foreign" does not equal "future terrorist" any more (or any less) than "U.S. citizen" does. We've forgotten McVeigh and Nichols *so* quickly. And the anthrax mailer remains mysteriously at large...

    --
    Freedom: "I won't!"
  13. MIT is very concerned by The+Pim · · Score: 5, Informative
    I was at an informal dinner of 40 or so MIT professors a couple weeks ago. (My landlord caters the event, and I help him out sometimes because I'm interested in the restaurant business.) The theme of discussion was the difficulty foreign students are now having getting visas to come to MIT.

    In the company of only their peers and an eavesdropping busboy, the group was candid and unguarded. Almost everyone had a story of a student who had been hindered by the stricter immegration rules. One expressed doubt that MIT could "be MIT" under these circumstances. Jerry Sussman--co-author of "the only good book on computer programming" (quote from a Slashdot favorite I won't name) and all-around brilliant and creative guy--said he's "been depressed for the last year". Man, that made me want to cry.

    This convinced me that the problem is real, that it is hampering the advancement of learning--and that it could even lead to the unseating of the US as the center of the learned world.

    --

    The evaluation of an action as 'practical' . . . depends on what it is that one wishes to practice.
  14. Before you agree with the US govt on this... by dillon_rinker · · Score: 5, Insightful

    ...pay attention to who's saying the government is wrong: Sheila Widnall. From 1993-1997, she was secretary of the Air Force, arguably the most technologically advanced of the four branches of the US military. For those not up on US government, the Secretary of the Air Force is the civilian head of the US Air Force. All the generals answered to her; she answered only to the Secretary of Defense, who answers to POTUS. She would have had authority and responsiblity for all the research funded by the Air Force, so she's seen both sides of this (though I don't know to what extent she micromanaged it).

    She makes a VERY good point that what the government should do is to determine what's classified research and what's not. It's reasonable to restrict the participation of foreign nationals in classified research, but the concern with this grant was that it was for unclassified research.

    For you cynics, note that this grant wasn't for that much money (only half a million) and was probably chosen to send a message because they didn't much want to do it anyway and it wasn't enough money to worry about.

  15. Re:Hey I'll take the money by NecroPuppy · · Score: 5, Interesting

    There is no saying it was racist.

    Nationalist, sure, but that isn't the same thing.

    If the 'strings' had said "No French" or "No Germans", then this conversation wouldn't be happening.

    In this case, the NSA wanted to pre-screen any foreign nationals working on the project.

    I'm sorry, but I don't see the racism there. They didn't say that they (the foreign nationals) automatically couldn't work on the project, they just wanted to check out whichever ones did.

    Profiling? Maybe. But it happens regularly in government and business. The last two companies I worked for had a much more rigorous screening process for foreign nationals. In their defense, they'd gotten burned at least once.

    But then so has the US Government. I don't blame them for being careful.

    --
    I like you, Stuart. You're not like everyone else, here, at Slashdot.
  16. Bully for MIT by MacAndrew · · Score: 5, Insightful

    If the gov't wants security checks, and in some cases that's reasonable (remember all the military work MIT has done, most famously during WWII), that should get them on EVERYONE. Stop this xenophobic insult now.

    Aside from the philosophical problem with accused foreign citizens mindlessly, need we remind the NSA of all the wonderful homegrown dangers we have managed to grow in the U.S., from Timothy McVeigh (& Nichols) to the Unabomber to the Columbine shooters to John Walker Lindh to this DC sniper bastard Muhammed, and that's just the last ten years. And and those are just the killers; don't forget double agents Aldrich Ames (CIA) and Robert Philip Hanssen (FBI). Even if you are sympathetic to some of these, consider the rest.

    My argument is that if you're going to be paranoid, do be equal opportunity about it out of respect for logic and fair play. Look in your own backyard.

  17. Re:Good job US Govt by buss_error · · Score: 5, Insightful
    McCarthy once told a person under investigation "This committy will decide what rights you have and what rights you do not have!"

    Personally, I think your views are shortsighted and, sorry to be so frank, wrong.

    It's true that 9-11 was a terrible thing to happen. It's also true that the US has done more damage to itself in the name of "Protecting the Homeland" than any terrorist could ever do. We have restricted the very freedoms that make this country great. We have violated the rights of people because they MIGHT be someone who knows someone who's dangerous. We have detained citizens without trial or charges and forbiden them to speak with anyone, even an attorney, even a government appointed attorney. We strip search grandmothers, and detain people that have funny last names. We listen to the quisling, reporting people that don't leave tips in greasy spoons.

    "Those that would trade liberity for security deserve [and will get] neither." - B. Franklin.

    As for your assertion that no one thought flight school students could be terrorists, you have your facts wrong. Remember the conflab at the FBI? That's what that's about. Someone DID think there might be terrorists being trained at flight schools.

    To protect ourselves from terrorist requires a scalpel, not the howtizer that's being used. The true cancer of a free society are those that would render freedom impossible. The true terrorists are they that wage war on the rights of the people. The real terror is the loosing of the dogs of a police state.

    --
    Necessity is the plea for every infringement of human freedom. It is the argument of tyrants; it is the creed of slaves.