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Grad Student Project Uses Wikis To Stash Data, Miffs Admins

Anonymous writes "Two graduate students at the Ivy League's Brown University built a P2P system to use abandoned wiki sites to store data. The students were stealing bandwidth from open MediaWiki sites to send data between users as an alternative to BitTorrent. There was immediate backlash as site operators quickly complained to the University. The project appears to be shutdown, but many of the pages still remain on the web. The project homepage was also taken down and the students posted an apology this afternoon." The same submitter links to two different forum discussions on the project.

2 of 268 comments (clear)

  1. Theft? by palegray.net · · Score: 5, Interesting

    The students were stealing bandwidth from open MediaWiki sites

    The fact that some "admin" abandoned a site, with open privileges to post on it, does not constitute theft. I manage servers and write code for a living, and while I'd put a stop to such practices on any site I managed, the use of the term "theft" is laughable.

    This is very much reminiscent of Microsoft crying to the media that all their security problems were due to evil hackers, and not their abject failure to follow long-accepted industry practices for code reviews and architecture. My response: cry me a river, and congrats to the grad students for their innovative work in the field of distributed communications.

    1. Re:Theft? by palegray.net · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Hey, I agree it was a dick move on the students' part, but I still respect the research. Everything is obvious in hindsight, by the way.

      What these students have really done is make a very public demonstration of something that's possible before less ethical parties got a crack at doing it on a large scale. For that, they should be commended. Would you condemn those who release proof-of-concept code for security exploits just because a vendor sat on their ass for months, refusing to care about the problem?