Ohio University Leads U.S. Colleges in File Sharing 135
An anonymous reader writes "The Columbus Dispatch is reporting that Ohio University leads the nation in illegal music download notifications, having received 1,287 RIAA complaints since September, with between ten and 15 notices arriving daily. The University is attempting to deflect criticism with a PR piece, saying open networks required for academic freedom make it difficult to stop illegal file sharing. They also point out that the University's architecture makes it much easier to determine who is actually sharing the files. This makes a complaint more likely, as the RIAA knows who to target. "
Ohio U also has the most students in the country (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Ohio U also has the most students in the countr (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Ohio U also has the most students in the countr (Score:3, Informative)
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Why is that? Do statisticians prefer large schools so that they can improve their sample sizes?
Go Buckeyes! (Score:2)
Well you have to be best at something.
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Re:Ohio U also has the most students in the countr (Score:3, Funny)
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And now it's the #1 place to get your bootleg "Buffy" collection going... why would you bother with anywhere else?!?
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I shouldn't make that mistake, especially since I went to school at the University of Cincinnati (2 n's, not 2 t's).
I experienced two Halloweens at OU, so I am quite aware it's in the middle of nowhere
OSU is not THE OSU (Score:1)
Athens is the poorest, most backward rural area of all of Ohio. It's about 20 minutes from Marietta, though. Not even part of Appalachia, IIRC, though it would fit right in. I spent a couple summers there.
I almost went to OU, and it is definitely a party school, though OSU isn't any kind of slouch in that regard. At least columbus is flat enough to flip a car over properly.
re: subj
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The locals are definitely interesting people.
Related Article (Score:3, Interesting)
Crackdown is nationwide and New. (Score:3, Informative)
The Boston Herald covered this a few days ago. While the year is only half over, the number of RIAA complaints is already three times what it was last year [slashdot.org]. It looks like the RIAA got smart and narrowed their indiscriminate abuse of 12 year olds and working moms in housing projects. Now they are indiscriminately abusing University students. The problem for them is that there's no good victim for their harassment, especially when they are wrong so often. The reaction from schools like Purdue is what I'd
Proud to be an Ohioan (Score:2)
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I live about 45 minutes away from Athens and I have to say that it is quite the fun little college town, although since I went to WVU I have to give props to Morgantown WV as an equally fun little college town.
makes sense (Score:3, Funny)
Top 25 schools... (Score:2, Interesting)
As a student at Northern Illinois, I am pleased to announce that we are number 13 on the list. I also find it very interesting that Purdue takes a "Eh, it's to much work to care" stance: "Some schools aggressively warn students after they receive complaints. Others don't. Purdue, which has received 1,068 complaints so far this year but only 37 in 2006, said it rarely notifies students accused by the RIAA because it's too much trouble to find al
Re:Top 25 schools... (Score:5, Insightful)
Instead, they are attempting to offload this responsibility to the universities, thereby limiting file sharing AND their own expenses to maximize profit.
Note that an increase of over 2,786% year over year is not explainable by any changes in behavior of the population in question. Instead, it is explainable only by changes in the behavior of the RIAA. The likelihood is that, between 2005 and 2006, the RIAA hired a bunch of writers to fire off 30X more letters than in years' past, so as to manufacture a scary-sounding story that a lazy reporter will swallow.
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Without access to Universities logs, how is RIAA going to do the investigation? Are universities considered common carriers? Otherwise, I guess it would be easier for RIAA to simply sue the University.
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To your question, how was the RIAA able to send their letters? I assume it was based on some initial investigation that they did. However, if they want to go further and actually lodge a legitimate complaint, they should file suit and
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I guess, they don't want to follow the legal avenue because they just want to strongarm the users into a "deal" as they usually do.
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They are not. Only Telco's have common carrier status in the USA.
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Also many transportation companies, public utilities, some accomodations, etc. are common carriers. The concept predates telecommunications, actually, and really has more to do with moving cargo and people.
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(1) RIAA decides to file a complaint against you
(2) Ohio yanks your Internet access without warning
(3) You have to prove your innocence
(4) If you can't, you have to prove that you have deleted the offending content from your computer.
The University of Delaware currently runs an identical racket, but what UD does is pretty classic: in order for you to get your computed "checked" after deleting cont
Note: Ohio University is not Ohio State (Score:3, Interesting)
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Not surprising (Score:2)
Not something to be proud of (Score:5, Insightful)
With the door open, all sorts of scum gets in. (Score:2)
I think that the key here is that their network is conducive, basically, to getting caught.
They don't give any details in the PR puff-piece that's linked from the Slashdot blurb, but it sounds like the
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http://irobert.org/2006/05/data-theft-at-ohio-univ ersity-risks-and-preventative-measures/ [irobert.org]
I believe the director of IT at the school stepped down not long after all of the student data thefts from their networks sometime last year because he was found to have been completely incompetent and unresponsive with regards to the campus' computer security issues. I'm not surprised that during th
University Bagman. (Score:2)
They don't give any details in the PR puff-piece that's linked from the Slashdot blurb, but it sounds like they must be issuing every client on the network its own externally-addressable IP address. While this is kinda cool, from the perspective of being able to run your own server or something, it also makes it exceptionally easy for the RIAA to home in on you. At other places, where individual PCs are hidden behind NAT, it's more difficult to pick out a particular client and send a subpoena / violation o
Information Sharing is part of Learning (Score:5, Funny)
Kid: how come we stopped singing happy birthday?
Mom: because Time-Warner "owns" the rights to that, and we don't want to get on the MAFIAA hit list. The cost is far greater than a usual birthday celebration. And, whats wrong with "Good birthday to you"?
Kid: why is the sky blue
Dad: you know, many natural processes can now be patented, copyrighted and generally "owned". My company, SkyTech is patenting that atmospheric prism effect, so I cannot discuss that without revealing trade secrets, and ongoing patented research. Ask your mother.
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Mom: because Time-Warner "owns" the rights to that, and we don't want to get on the MAFIAA hit list.
We're Number 3! (Score:2)
My alma mater [unl.edu] is third in RIAA notices; after so many years of football dominance, it's nice to be in the top 5 of something again. Like Ohio University, the campus network at UNL makes it relatively easy to associate people with IPs.
(On a related note, the 100-person computer science/business honors program I was in [unl.edu] was, at one time, using something in the area of 25% of the student housing network bandwidth; note that this particular network has about 5,000 users.)
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Open Networks for Academic Freedom? (Score:3, Interesting)
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Disclaimer: I'm an alumnus.
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Well then, send me a recruiter and ROLL ME IN !! (Score:2)
Seriously though, must be a nice, liberty-loving place.
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Course if R.K.L. Collins and D.M. Skover are correct on that front, then this IS a useful measure =)
Ohio University (Score:1)
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RIAA actions remind me of a quote (Score:5, Funny)
The quote from Ferris Bueller's Day Off:
Something is going on, and I'm going to find out what it is.
I'm going to catch this kid and put a dent in his future.
Years from now, when he looks back
on the ruin his life has become...
he will remember Edward Rooney (err, RIAA).
List (Score:5, Informative)
http://www.eschoolnews.com/news/showStoryts.cfm?Ar ticleID=6876 [eschoolnews.com]
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I'm really proud... (Score:2)
Perhaps there's still hope in the American university system after all..
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what this should read as (Score:1)
This is not a measurement of who's actually file shareing most, as an activity people don't like to advertise, it's very difficult to say who's engaging in it most.
No surprises there (Score:2)
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There are a whole lot of people who went to OU that did not simply get a job as an office assistant afterward. The grandparent needs to pull his head out of his rear.
We're actually well known for journalism, pretty well known for CS (and CMU hates us becuase we give them a serious run for their money in competitions)
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Sylar, is that you?
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Maybe if you used some of your superior OSU intellect you could figure out that when the poster above you was using the word parent in the snese of thread hierarchy.
I don't see where this superiority complex of OSU students comes from, like it matters that the school is bigger, or is in a bigger athletic conference. We're still both public schools in the state of Ohio.
Yeah, plenty of OU grads I know work at libraries and are office assistants, but at the same
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We do get a lot of grief from people who go to OSU, Miami, and CMU (the last of those because of our CS dept). It gets kind of old after a while, so some OU people are a bit quick to defend.
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I appreciate the assist, though. What program are you in?
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By the way, do you know if Osterman is still teaching now that he's taken over the network stiuation or is he too busy with his new duties?
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There's nothing to do in Athens, Ohio except drink and screw
Most of the OU grads I've known have been office assistants, who no doubt have transported their surfing skills to the workplace.
Funny, most of the OU grads I know have very successful careers. About every OSU grad I know has a communications degree and would have been better off saving their money, time, and safety (from living in a high-crime area right next to the ghetto).
Generalizations are fun, aren't they?
The PR sounds a little fimilar... (Score:1)
OU student view (Score:1)
Turns out PeerGuardian 2 never started up. Oops.
I wonder why (Score:1)
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Sheesh. Underclassmen these days
Seeing as how I'm going to OU... (Score:1)
As many have said before, this is just the number of people getting caught. Seriously, most of the kids here are not the brightest bulbs when it comes to not getting caught downloading music.
I run a basic computer services business here for experience and some income. I'd say 90% of the people I help have limewire installed and when I ask them a few questions, few to none understand how the university can track what they're doing. The ones that do simply don't care. Ignorance
Really? (Score:2)
Gives me kind of a warm, fuzzy feeling about Ohio U.
RIAA: Ruining Lives (Score:1)
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Hmm that doesn't seem very top 10 at all. I would have thought top ten meant gigs per day.
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Iam not condoning illegal sharing, but instead of paying 40K to RIAA, he could have hired a good lawyer and dragged RIAA to court making them drop the case.
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They said I didn't have to be good at math to be a journalist!
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Hmmm, Moses supposes my toeses are roses, Moses supposes erroneously. Nope thats no help.
Re:Lies and Statistics (Score:5, Insightful)
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huh? (Score:2)
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If they were smart, they wouldn't be caught. (Score:3, Insightful)
Firewall that site so only on-campus addresses can access it. If you want to, make it invitation only. Just remember to encrypt the transmissions.
There, now no one off-campus can tell that you're doing anything at all on-campus.
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The Bobcats (OU) only wish they were as awesome as Buckeyes (OSU).
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Bobcats vs. Buckeyes (Score:2)
The Bobcats (OU) only wish they were as awesome as Buckeyes (OSU).
OU is a trailer park with nice trees. It is harmless, vague, and dopey, much like its student body.
OSU is a festering cyst. For the sake of honesty, it should be renamed back to "Ohio A&M College"; for the sake of humanity, it should be torn down.
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Re:Their network is Open because they are incompet (Score:1)
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(Seriously. I don't get the whole "THE Ohio State University" thing. It just sounds so oddly phrased, and yet I hear it all the time. What's up?)
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