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by jmix
4893 days ago
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I see your legalistic approach to MIT's responsibilities, but this fascination with "endorsement" is missing the point. Universities are not government labs, where you'd expect every participant to clear every activity with their superiors. Research doesn't work that way. And if universities do not stick up for exploration, who will? Was MIT obligated to defend this fellow? No. Should it have defended him? Most definitely. |
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MS: "Hey, um, so we've learned that one of your students just published a way to jeopardize our entire project, one that we've spent multiple millions of dollars developing. He seems to have done it in your labs with your tools. What's your take?"
So MIT's response can go one of two ways:
1) "Yeah, how about that? Cool, huh? We didn't know about it but we fully back him and let's see what the internet does with this."
2) "Um, we had no idea he was doing this and didn't ask him to publish. He did this alone."
Do you see where each direction leads?