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Internet Curfew for College Students? 342

140Mandak262Jamuna writes "IIT Bombay, one of the top Indian engineering schools, is restricting internet access to its students. The restriction is simply to cut off all internet access at night from the dorms. The school claims the 24/7/365 internet access is hampering academic performance, personality development and extra curricular activities. Though these are the 'official' reasons, it appears there are other reasons too. Mr Prakash Gopalan, the Dean of Student Affairs, says, 'one only had to look at the hard drive of any of the students' computers to see that bad content dominated over good.'"
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Internet Curfew for College Students?

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  • by davidwr ( 791652 ) on Wednesday March 21, 2007 @12:45PM (#18430417) Homepage Journal
    Now in addition to tuition, sports, and *gasp* quality of education, students will select schools based on Internet availability.
    • Will? (Score:2, Interesting)

      by Anonymous Coward
      How about have been? For more than a decade? I'm not saying it was the factor in the school I chose, but the ethernet port per person in the dorm rooms sure made me a lot happier with my decision, and that was in 1996.
      • Same.. (Score:5, Insightful)

        by CasperIV ( 1013029 ) on Wednesday March 21, 2007 @02:05PM (#18431839)
        I don't think I would attend a school that tried to restrict my internet access or had a poor infrastructure. If I'm going to school, and paying a fortune to attend, I expect to have access to every tool I might need any time I might need it (barring physical limitations).

        By the time you reach college you should be self sufficient enough to manage your own affairs. If your not, you deserve what you get (fail/get pregnant/have a kid/get arrested/etc). It's not the schools place to babysit the students at this level.
        • by morcego ( 260031 )

          By the time you reach college you should be self sufficient enough to manage your own affairs.

          Maybe where you live. But here, on plant earth, that is not even close to true.

          By the time you reach college you should be self sufficient enough to manage your own affairs.

          I think 99% of the parents would disagree with you on that one.

          In any case, I don't think this internet curfew will solve anything, besides annoying the hell out of people and making it hard for students to search for reference material at night

        • Re: (Score:3, Funny)

          by Score Whore ( 32328 )

          If I'm going to school, and paying a fortune to attend, I expect to have access to every tool I might need any time I might need it (barring physical limitations).

          As a taxpayer I expect that my state funded schools exist to serve the purpose of education. Since that appears to be your goal as well I think we should form a coalition to achieve this purpose. Our platform can be:

          1) Internet banwidth is provided for the purpose of education. Any educational use that is associated with the student's current cour

          • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

            by rodoke3 ( 681504 )
            As long as you add: 6) No student may be compelled to subscribe to university internet access, or any internet access. 7) The university shall not penalize students in any fashion for observing 6). 8) The university shall provide no unreasonable barriers to private service to their students. I will happily join your "coalition". As a fellow taxpayer, I feel the same way. If students want to waste time, I say let them do it on their own dime. You with me?
          • by Thuktun ( 221615 )

            2) Any usage that does not fit under #1 will be billed at $1.00 per bit. Payable immediately.
            If you're concerned about "inappropriate use of state funded resources", charge them what it actually costs for their traffic, not some exorbitant, punitive rate.
        • I don't think I would attend a school that tried to restrict my internet access or had a poor infrastructure. If I'm going to school, and paying a fortune to attend

          A fair comment, IF you're paying the school a fortune. Education in the IITs is highly subsidized, and is ridiculously low, if compared to an American engineering school. If a government subsidized computer network is being misused by the students, it isn't too unfair of the government to try and curb it.

          I expect to have access to every tool I

    • Now in addition to tuition, sports, and *gasp* quality of education, students will select schools based on Internet availability.

      I think that probably internet connectivity and and quality of education are related. I know that I work and learn best between 8:00PM and midnight, and the labs at school are usually nice and quiet on Friday and Saturday evenings. It would be a shame not to be able to take advantage of my work cycle.

      Now, if they filtered slashdot, I would spend way more time learning...

  • by Short Circuit ( 52384 ) * <mikemol@gmail.com> on Wednesday March 21, 2007 @12:46PM (#18430439) Homepage Journal
    Eh? What about those of us whose extracurricular [grc4.org] activities [rosettacode.org] depend on the Internet? And those of us who colleges offer courses online? Those of us who take classes in the evening, and catch up with our social lives afterward?

    Glad I don't live in a dorm.
    • by jcorno ( 889560 )
      I never started writing a paper more than 12 hours before it was due. That policy would've screwed me over pretty good. These people act like they've never heard of an all-nighter before.
      • by westlake ( 615356 ) on Wednesday March 21, 2007 @01:01PM (#18430733)
        These people act like they've never heard of an all-nighter before.

        or maybe after seeing the end product of an all-nighter they want to put an end to it.

      • I never started writing a paper more than 12 hours before it was due. That policy would've screwed me over pretty good. These people act like they've never heard of an all-nighter before.

        Sounds like you never heard of a typewriter, or GASP!, pen and paper.

      • same.

        plus, this makes it much more difficult to cram for an exam the night before.
      • by markov_chain ( 202465 ) on Wednesday March 21, 2007 @01:26PM (#18431117)
        Without access in dorms, you would just get your lazy bum ass to a lab and do your paper writing there. The awesome social side benefit of this is bonding with other people in the same situation. Only the motivated ones would be in the lab anyway, so this is a great opportunity to create a high quality network.
        • Unless the motivated ones are actually motivated to do their work in the lab instead of "networking" with people like you who are there to socialize.
        • by Zenaku ( 821866 )
          Crowding will be an issue. I don't know about everyone else, but where I went to school going to library or communications center to get on a computer meant fighting to find an available machine, and then hoping it wasn't already fracked up.

          If there is no access from the dorms, and everyone has to go to the library to get on the net, they're going to need to add a whole lot of public computers at the library -- I think it's a pretty safe bet that there are a good deal many more students using the internet
        • by *weasel ( 174362 )
          Without access in dorms, you would just get your lazy bum ass to an area bar and blow off last-minute paper writing altogether. The awesome social side benefit of this is bonding with other people in the same situation. Only the motivated ones would be in the lab anyway --stressing out and melting down-- which would make even trying to work there insufferable.
    • Would they care? (Score:3, Insightful)

      by Moraelin ( 679338 )

      Eh? What about those of us whose extracurricular activities depend on the Internet? And those of us who colleges offer courses online? Those of us who take classes in the evening, and catch up with our social lives afterward?

      The problem there is that you expect them to be sane and logical about it. If they actually wanted to block "bad content", there would have been lots of other possibilities, like just blocking the porn sites at the proxy. Most companies do that.

      In reality it's a knee jerk "think of the

  • The facilities offered here are top-notch and there are very few engineering institutes in India that offer unlimited access to internet in hostels at all times for all days of the year.......IIT Madras put limits on internet usage more than a year now.Students do not have any net access in their hostel rooms from 0100 to 0500.

    So why is it bad when IIT-Bombay limits access?

    • science or technology related for a living?

      I write Linux tutorials for a living. . . 100% of my research is online. No Net access means I'm out of business.

      Online is where one gets current IT and science information, not from textbooks which might be several years old or magazines whose content is months old as of the cover date. Limiting access means limiting student access to essential research materials. A stupid thing for an engineering school to do.

      If you have to ask why IIT is doing a bad thing
    • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

      by warpEngine ( 953166 )

      I'm at IIT-Bombay student, so I can answer that. There haven't been enough computers in labs for *years*, and the authorities have only been sitting on their ass. The ones that are there are down as often as they're up, and many machines are underpowered. And one of our labs is not air-conditioned and gets blistering hot in the summer...

      So we buy our own systems. And now they turn off network access at nights. Great going.

      Most of us need all-night access before submissions, and to work on our projects,

  • Squishie (Score:5, Funny)

    by Stanistani ( 808333 ) on Wednesday March 21, 2007 @12:48PM (#18430481) Homepage Journal
    >'one only had to look at the hard drive of any of the students' computers to see that bad content dominated over good.'

    It's a sad commentary about the Simpsons' effect on our culture - that I can only hear Apu's voice when I read this.
    • Re:Squishie (Score:5, Insightful)

      by cayenne8 ( 626475 ) on Wednesday March 21, 2007 @12:53PM (#18430585) Homepage Journal
      First thing I wondered is...what the HELL is that administrator doing looking at students' harddrives??

      Sounds like some bad snooping going on there.

      "It's a sad commentary about the Simpsons' effect on our culture - that I can only hear Apu's voice when I read this."

      Heheh...me too...something like "Thank You! Surf again...."

  • Bad Content (Score:2, Insightful)

    by flynt ( 248848 )
    That's because bad content is correlated with very large file sizes. Seriously, how long will this last?
  • by morgan_greywolf ( 835522 ) * on Wednesday March 21, 2007 @12:48PM (#18430487) Homepage Journal
    I had 24/7/365 Net xs when I wuz in coll3g3!!! I turn3d 0ut ju5t f1ne!!! LOL!!!!
  • Uhhh (Score:5, Insightful)

    by brkello ( 642429 ) on Wednesday March 21, 2007 @12:49PM (#18430489)
    So now they download their pr0n during the day instead of at night. Instead of engaging in wholesome activities like playing CS:Source, they will go out drinking and fornicating. College students are going to find ways to be lazy no matter what you do. Just because you can track Internet usage and can't track the other stuff doesn't mean the solution is to cut off the Internet. You are just punishing people who could be using it to further their education.

    In any case, I feel sorry for them because clearly they have stupid people in charge. But, on the plus side, they get some real world experience dealing with stupid people making decisions they have no say in.
    • Yup, sounds just right for preparing engineering students for the business world. There are lots of MBAs out there, you know.
    • Re:Uhhh (Score:5, Interesting)

      by Hoi Polloi ( 522990 ) on Wednesday March 21, 2007 @01:03PM (#18430775) Journal
      It'll just pose a challenge to their CS and EE students. Just wait until they start rigging up wireless links to outside connections. I welcome our new Indian hackers.
    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by jovetoo ( 629494 )
      Please keep in mind that this is a different culture. It is easy to judge those administrators by our standards, but that does not mean that is just. I have no doubt that they have grown up in an entirely different world than our western world. The changes are coming much faster for them then they came for us (since we are driving them).

      They are living in a world where the students (used to) have 24/7/365 access to the internet while a few hundred km out in the country, their 13yr old niece goes into for
    • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

      by chaoticgeek ( 874438 )
      I agree... During part of my spring break I came back early and the net was down, so I read a book, watched TV, played video games, and played guitar... Lack of internet connection does not stop me from having fun while avoiding that paper that is due... Plus the fact that I will be up till two or three in the morning with or with out an internet connection so it still does not make me go to sleep earlier to get up for class earlier.

    • From my experience, most IIT Engineering students won't even know CS:Source if it landed on their lap. Sure they are bright people who can solve differential equations in split seconds, but they are not so much into GAMING. I know this first hand, as I have friends from different IITs around India
    • by giminy ( 94188 )
      Seriously. Most colleges have cable in the dorm. It won't be long before the kids just get a cable modem or DSL service instead of using the campus Intarnet anyway.

      This is a classic example of chasing the symptom instead of the "disease" (if, indeed, using the internet a lot could be considered a disease). If the college really thinks downloading warez and pr0n and other late-night internet activities are so bad, why not, y'know, educate students. Oh my, I just suggested that a university educate studen
    • by kabocox ( 199019 )
      In any case, I feel sorry for them because clearly they have stupid people in charge. But, on the plus side, they get some real world experience dealing with stupid people making decisions they have no say in.

      Um, that describes the entire educational process from birth to college as well. You don't have much to any say in how your parents raise you, you don't have any say in what the standards are in the school that your parents send you. If there are lots of stupid people in charge with stupid rules, it's
  • I Spy (Score:3, Funny)

    by Nom du Keyboard ( 633989 ) on Wednesday March 21, 2007 @12:49PM (#18430501)
    'one only had to look at the hard drive of any of the students' computers to see that bad content dominated over good.'"

    Oh, so they're spying on the hard drives of their students now. Bad University! Bad! Have you been taking lessons from the RIAA?

  • by endianx ( 1006895 ) on Wednesday March 21, 2007 @12:50PM (#18430527)
    If you can't handle college without having the administration trying to force you to work, you aren't going to be able to handle a job. Your boss isn't going to hold your hand. Letting the people spend time on the internet instead of studying weeds out the lazy and promotes the hard working. If you aren't going to make it in your field, it is best you find out quickly, instead of after years of wasted money on college.

    I have heard time and time again about Indian education (specifically Computer Science) failing to adequately prepare students for real life. This seems like another example of that.
    • If you can't handle college without having the administration trying to force you to work, you aren't going to be able to handle a job. Your boss isn't going to hold your hand. Letting the people spend time on the internet instead of studying weeds out the lazy and promotes the hard working.

      Where did it say the administration would force you to work? All the article said was "No internet access overnight in the student hostels (dorms). Why wouldn't they just get off of their lazy asses and head to the

      • by Bastard of Subhumani ( 827601 ) on Wednesday March 21, 2007 @01:55PM (#18431657) Journal

        Why wouldn't they just get off of their lazy asses and head to the library?
        A wild guess here - because even in India, it's not generally considered good form to wank in the libtrary?
  • Won't Work (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Paulrothrock ( 685079 ) on Wednesday March 21, 2007 @12:50PM (#18430529) Homepage Journal

    College students are masters of getting what they want despite rules and regulations. Some enterprising group of CS students will go around caching web sites or host forums off of their computers (or the CS lab computers) and the word will get out about where folks can go to be "on the internet" between dusk and dawn.

    Of course, there's always game systems, iPods, and off-campus wireless networks for people to use.

    The best thing to do would be to raise the requirements for classes, thus forcing people to have to study more, and require participation in an extra-curricular activity as a requirement for graduation. Or you could just realize that socialization patterns are changing and deal with it.

    • "The best thing to do would be to raise the requirements for classes, thus forcing people to have to study more"

      Judging from the intense competition to get in I'd say they are under enough stress already.
  • Solution (Score:5, Funny)

    by daeg ( 828071 ) on Wednesday March 21, 2007 @01:08PM (#18430855)
    $ du -hLs /home/daeg/porn
    18G /home/daeg/porn

    $ du -hLs /home/daeg/school
    29M /home/daeg/school


    Ack! Quick, everyone symlink your porn directory into your school directory!
  • by xerxesnine ( 1078469 ) on Wednesday March 21, 2007 @01:30PM (#18431197)
    Several years ago I had a (relatively short) spat of addiction to Neverwinter Nights. During a random conversation with my online mates one night, I was rather shocked to discover that most of them were in college. I myself had graduated college several years ago and had solid high-salary job. My Neverwinter hobby/addiction was just a brief fascination --- something to do in between girlfriends.

    There is so much studying and socializing to do while in college, I honestly can't imagine playing any online game during college. That is why I was shocked --- I was like, what the FUCK are you doing playing Neverwinter Nights? We had been playing around 4 hours a day. College is a key time to improve oneself, and they had been squandering that time. While I was squandering my own time as well, the difference was that the impact on my life was one hell of a lot less (negligible, in fact).
    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by slashrogue ( 775436 )
      You say that as if those students didn't presume that the impact on their life was also negligible.
    • Re: (Score:3, Funny)

      by raehl ( 609729 )
      There is so much studying and socializing to do while in college, I honestly can't imagine playing any online game during college.

      Well, you've got to do SOMETHING until you're old enough to get into the bar....
  • by Grashnak ( 1003791 ) on Wednesday March 21, 2007 @01:30PM (#18431205)

    "IIT Bombay, one of the top Indian engineering schools, is restricting beer access to its students. The restriction is simply to cut off all access to beer at night from the dorms. The school claims the 24/7/365 beer access is hampering academic performance, personality development and extra curricular activities.
    There, now it resembles MY college reality.
    • My opinion (Score:2, Insightful)

      Well. Being from a university myself, these are my observations and opinions:

      A. You can not stop students from "bad" content. The internet isn't the ONLY source of all this. You can't really stop people from going outside IITB, and you wouldn't want to ransack every visitor at the gate.

      B. I am not sure if the argument is against copyrighted content, but otherwise, I definitely believe that students must be given the freedom to watch what they have and what they want. And doing this ransacking business

  • by RyoShin ( 610051 )
    Because the internet is the only thing that can distract college students in their free time, amirite?
  • If is truely for the sole purpose of helping people get back to studying, it is a very dangerous "solution". It will just allow more lazy people who don't have their priorities straight into society pretending to be responsible professionals. Let them fail!
  • My university also doAÉ$~ß;$ß[;ädsl1pkrp$%£":L$K"P{J^NO CARRIER
  • by HangingChad ( 677530 ) on Wednesday March 21, 2007 @02:06PM (#18431875) Homepage

    Mr Prakash Gopalan, the Dean of Student Affairs, says, 'one only had to look at the hard drive of any of the students' computers to see that bad content dominated over good.'

    Bad by what definition? And who sets that standard? The Dean of Student Affairs deciding what's good and bad on the internet is a little like my pharmacist letting their conscience decide which meds are good and bad.

    Both of those are bad ideas. Far more dangerous than any content on a college kid's hard drive.

  • Just because there's porn on my HDDs than anything else, doesn't mean I spend all my time watching porn. It just means I have a large selection to choose from and wont tire easily from my collection. In the amount of hours in a week, I spend the majority of them at work and second to that would be resting.
  • Technological measures don't solve social problems... This is more an act of over-bearing school (nanny) administrators.

    Additionally, 802.11 transceivers are tiny, and dirt cheap these days. All it takes is one person to plug a USB adapter into a library or lab computer, change your default gateway, and everyone is online.

    And that's assuming they physically sever the network link... If not, any type of masquerading could get access. Even if the lab and library computers are on a separate network segment
  • Mr Prakash Gopalan, the Dean of Student Affairs, says, 'one only had to look at the hard drive of any of the students' computers to see that bad content dominated over good.'
    Woo! Sample size of one! Now that's what I call a rock-solid statistic.

    Facts are for pussies. Feel the truthiness.
  • It's precisely the kind of students who aren't satified with anything but "the best" education who are least likely to put up with this.

    More to the point, regardless of how much pr0n, myspace, and mp3s/movies students download, the Internet is an absolutely essential research tool for anyone doing science or engineering. The place one gets reference information on components is online. A generation ago, my reference stuff was a shelf of databooks. A few years ago, it was a pile of CDs. Now, I just downloa

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