Slashdot Mirror


University Networks Block Student Project

An anonymous reader writes "A computer science student at University College London put together FitFinder as a bit of a joke — it's been described as a cross between Twitter and personal ads, and it rapidly became very popular. The university took exception to this and started by blocking the site from being accessed on campus. Not content with this, a few weeks later it fined the student £300 and had him take the site down completely. Currently, the site is still offline, although there is a petition with several thousand signatures requesting its return. In the meantime, a site called PhitFinder has appeared, claiming to have no link to the original."

9 of 167 comments (clear)

  1. Stop having control by Darkness404 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    If you are old enough to attend college/university you are old enough to do whatever you want. Stop "babysitting" and let students do whatever they please. Universities and colleges exist to educate people and hand them a piece of paper letting them get a job. Thats all they should do. Let students think for themselves, give them facts and have them make their own opinion and do what they want with them.

    --
    Taxation is legalized theft, no more, no less.
    1. Re:Stop having control by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

      It's intolerant Trolls like yourself that support oppression and censorship. Neoconservatism may be popular, but just because everybody is jumping on the Special Interest Group bandwagon doesn't mean that you have to be as immoral as everybody else.

      If you don't like TV then turn it off, if you don't like Web Sites then don't click on their links. And finally, if you're going to mouth off about an article you should at least read it first (which you obviously haven't).

      Some normal people in this world are getting sick and tired of Right Wing people (whether they be feminists or climate-change deniers) trying to force their intolerant attitudes and lifestyles on other people.

    2. Re:Stop having control by ultranova · · Score: 4, Insightful

      If you attend a college or university, chances are you are held to a standard of behaviour that prevents you from making the learning institution look like a fool.

      Held by what authority? Please explain the logic that justifies the university - or, for that matter, any organization - demanding complete control over its students lives?

      Admissions papers are full of "Sign here on the X", one of them was your agreement to not be a jackass and accept the college's rulings on your behavior.

      Do you honestly think that you are bound to university's will just because you signed a paper? That they can simply decide that they don't like something you've done so you have to pay them 300 pounds? Seriously?

      Don't like it? There's the door.

      Except that, as you yourself noted, the student and the university have a contract.

      --

      Forget magic. Any technology distinguishable from divine power is insufficiently advanced.

    3. Re:Stop having control by clustro · · Score: 4, Insightful

      What in god's name are you talking about?

      In my senior year of engineering, I had to work with a team on a design project, and we presented it not only to the faculty, but the industrial advisory board - big shots at companies. The sole purpose was to prove to the employers that the department was producing engineers worth hiring.

      I was visiting schools for doctoral programs this past spring, and met many graduate students whose professors had lined up a job or good post-doc for them afterward. That's one of the things that made the programs I visited so popular - they don't leave you hanging on welfare after you blow 5 years of your life on an advanced engineering degree. A good school helps you get a job - either by the prestige of the degree, or direct intervention by faculty and staff. This is the 21st-century, not the 16th.

  2. Re:what has the university to do with it? by Pedersen · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Ya know, I really don't reply much, but the whole "anti-american" thing has gone too far when the damned summary includes something that tells anybody that knows anything about currency that this is not US thing. Here, allow me to quote it:

    they fined the student £300

    You might be especially interested in the currency indicator. That "£" symbol is used to denote the UK currency unit called the "pound". Over in the actual article (I know, nobody ever reads it, but I still did), they say this:

    Rich Martell, 21, a final-year computer sciences student at University College London, has taken the site down under pressure from university authorities, who were concerned that it was distracting students from their studies.

    So, at least in this case, no, it is not an "american thing". It is, most definitely, a "London thing". As London is considerably closer to Europe (and, being part of the UK, is considered to be part of Europe) than any part of the USA, I would have to venture that your assertion

    Here in europe, the university has nothing to do with their students privat projects.

    is now verified to be false. In fact, it might be so far false that this could be considered to be a "European thing", though I'm not sure I'd take it that far myself.

    --

    GPL made simple: What was my stuff is now our stuff. If you improve our stuff, please keep it our stuff.
  3. A fine and a takedown order? by Adrian+Lopez · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Not content with this, a few weeks later they fined the student £300 and had him take the site down completely.

    There's a university with far too much power.

    --
    "In prison you just have to shut your eyes and take it. Here you have to shut your eyes and give it."
  4. ta heck with the degree by zogger · · Score: 5, Insightful

    That's a zillion buck idea he had up and running! He should have told them to stuff it. That would have made the site even more popular as word of his telling "the man" to f off spread around his users and their friends. Plenty of time later to go get all the degrees ya want once you are rolling in dough.

  5. Re:what has the university to do with it? by Tanuki64 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    You are absolutely right. Nevertheless, it tells much when everybody automatically assumes this is an American thing.

  6. UCL brings it's self into disrepute by Martin+Spamer · · Score: 5, Insightful

    By stifling a creative and enterprising endeavour the UCL brings it's self into disrepute.