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.'"
One more college differentiator (Score:5, Insightful)
Will? (Score:2, Interesting)
Same.. (Score:5, Insightful)
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.
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Maybe where you live. But here, on plant earth, that is not even close to true.
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:Same.. (Score:5, Insightful)
Well, "should" really doesn't many any difference, does it ? As far as I'm concerned, they should be at 12.
Most are not "adult" enough to manage their own affairs by the time they graduate, either.
Then again, unless at some point they do start trying to do it (and fail), they will never learn. Managing one own life is something you only learn from experience (making mistakes), as far as I'm concerned.
The main difference is between supervision and "control". The Internet Curfew is not supervision or education, it is control. The only thing resulting from this is people how are even less capable or managing their own affairs. So, IN THIS PARTICULAR case:
Supervision = good
Control = bad
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I know that in most of my jobs, if i where to use my intuition and try and solve the problem on my own, i would probably have ended up doing something wrong in the bosses eyes, and i would either get yelled at or fired.
In fact, i can think of numerous examples where i DID take the initiative, and solved a problem on my own, and i was told off for it. It was immensely frustrating - here i was doing
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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
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Of course they are. Go to any university and ask the person responsible for filling the dorms what would happen if they cut off Internet access. They realize very well that internet access in a dorm room is considered essential, and that the demand for dorm rooms will take a hit if they don't have it. It's become a basic cost of doing business.
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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.
Whatever allows you finer granularity in deciding (Score:3, Interesting)
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...
Re:Whatever allows you finer granularity in decidi (Score:2)
Real hardcore CS students sit in the comp.lab from 1600-0800 every day of the week, including Sunday.
Internet access is integral to education... (Score:5, Insightful)
Glad I don't live in a dorm.
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Re:Internet access is integral to education... (Score:5, Insightful)
or maybe after seeing the end product of an all-nighter they want to put an end to it.
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Sounds like you never heard of a typewriter, or GASP!, pen and paper.
Re:Internet access is integral to education... (Score:5, Insightful)
Just where in the article did it say the students couldn't do their work in the library?
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Re:Internet access is integral to education... (Score:5, Insightful)
...you would have been doing the same thing as Albert Einstein. Or Copernicus. Or Plato.
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I live near Pittsburgh, about 15 miles away from the campuses of the University of Pittsburgh and Carnegie Mellon University. When it is not rush hour, it would take me about 20 minutes to reach campus. During rush hour? Maybe 45 minutes. Add 10 minutes to park the car and walk to the library, that means I am between 30 minutes and one hour away from where I need to do work. Just how much of a disadvantage are you talking about?
The students at IIT-Bombay a
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Research in the library? What is this, the 20th century?
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I never assume. Instead, I do something that you apparently don't. I read the FA --
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You do know that very few colleges actually recover their operating costs
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What are you talking about? Everyone is acting like losing overnight internet access in the DORM ROOMS is something akin to Hitler firing up the gas chambers. IIT-Bombay has stated that internet service will be available 24 hours a day, 7 days a week in either the library or in the departmental labs. So, if the student is trying to pull an all-nighter,
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I was exaggerating. I finished undergrad in 1988. Most of us didn't have PC's in our rooms, so we did our work at the library on Apple hardware.
by forcing underachievers to perform, do we not risk handing people who are ill-prepared for real-life jobs a diploma?
You might be misreading me. What I am really suggesting is posted here [slashdot.org]. It's not like the students at IIT-Bombay don't have any choices in the matter. Instead, they submit an article to Slashdot, crying about how "oppressed
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plus, this makes it much more difficult to cram for an exam the night before.
Re:Internet access is integral to education... (Score:5, Insightful)
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Re:Internet access is integral to education... (Score:4, Funny)
This reply is what happens when you let people play WoW all night: reasoning abilities and reading comprehension suffer.
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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
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Would they care? (Score:3, Insightful)
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
What about this? (Score:2)
So why is it bad when IIT-Bombay limits access?
so you aren't doing anything (Score:2)
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
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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)
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)
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)
Personality development (Score:5, Funny)
Uhhh (Score:5, Insightful)
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.
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Re:Uhhh (Score:5, Interesting)
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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
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no GAMES FOR YOU! (Score:2)
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
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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
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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)
Oh, so they're spying on the hard drives of their students now. Bad University! Bad! Have you been taking lessons from the RIAA?
Poor Preparation For Life Experience (Score:5, Insightful)
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.
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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
Re:Poor Preparation For Life Experience (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Poor Preparation For Life Experience (Score:5, Insightful)
Did you read the article from top to bottom? As I posted in this same discussion, MOST of the university campuses in India do not offer hostel (dorm-room) internet access 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. In fact, IIT-Madras pulled the access away from the dorms one year ago.
Part of the problem in dorm life is that you put up with the university's rules. If you don't like the rules, move out of the dorm or change to another university.
Take someone that attends a US Military College like West Point. They put up with rules like early morning revile and exercise. But, they receive one of the best educations in the world (of course, as soon as they leave West Point, they are headed to Iraq--but that is another discussion thread).
If you are reading this and you are a student at IIT-Bombay (Mumbai) that happens to disagree with your school's new policy, then you have three choices:
1) Do all of you late-night studying in the library.
2) Move out of your student dormitory.
3) or change schools.
There. Problem solved. And, stop wasting your energies on slashdot submissions.
Re:Poor Preparation For Life Experience (Score:4, Informative)
Only none of which is feasible.
1. I am an alumni of IIT-Kanpur (as my handle suggests), and the rule is that if you are a student, you HAVE to live in dorms. I know that same rule applies in IT-BHU.
2. Change university? Are you kidding me? And in NOT-AT-ALL individualistic society, you get to leave one of the only best institutes, when all these institutes share exactly one admission procedure (JEE)? Next thing you will be telling is to have sex in public in India.
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Won't Work (Score:5, Insightful)
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.
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Judging from the intense competition to get in I'd say they are under enough stress already.
Solution (Score:5, Funny)
18G
$ du -hLs
29M
Ack! Quick, everyone symlink your porn directory into your school directory!
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mv www.pornsite.orgy cs101
man pgp
Re:Solution (Score:5, Funny)
Not the solution, but the problem is real (Score:3, Insightful)
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).
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Well, you've got to do SOMETHING until you're old enough to get into the bar....
Who says they're squandering? (Score:3, Insightful)
I tended to do the full-burn thing early-on, finish my assignments, and then kick back for a game of Quake 2/3 or various others when I was in college. It was a great way to relieve stres
Small problem with the quote, so I fixed it (Score:4, Insightful)
My opinion (Score:2, Insightful)
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
Moo (Score:2)
This is retarded (Score:2)
I think this is a terrible idea (Score:2, Funny)
According to what standard? (Score:3, Insightful)
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 I have more porn (Score:2, Funny)
Idiotic... (Score:2)
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
One hard drive? (Score:2)
Facts are for pussies. Feel the truthiness.
so how long will IIT remain a top tech school? (Score:2)
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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Not really the issue at hand, though, is it? Are your children of college age, living at school, and therefor not under your direct authority as a parent?
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It's nice that you think your kids aren't getting on the Internet when they're not allowed to. And I'm sure they're also just going out to volunteer at church and not smoking weed behind the 7-11.
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If you want them to study more and improve their education, make the classes tougher and require more original work. Hell, raise the fees for Internet access, but cutting off late-night links is STUPID.
All it means is a few bright students are going to set up wireless links to off-campus DSL and charge a small fee for after-h
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Our corporations will save billions.
Re:Seems reasonable to me. (Score:5, Interesting)
For my sophomore year, I had a freshman roommate who used the campus internet to play WoW all night long. Literally -- I went to bed at 2 after finishing engineering homework, was up by 8, and he hadn't moved. Because of that he slept in all day, only to wake up later and play more WoW. Went to classes once a week at best. Guess who dropped out with a GPA below 2.0? Guess who wasn't ready for the real world, and wouldn't be able to hold a job for ten minutes with that approach to life?
An American high-school education is highly devalued from where it was years ago. Social promotions and strict rulesets are eliminating the gap that previously existed between the achieving students and the ones who would fail out. If you narrow that same gap in college, you end up doing the same thing -- churning out students who cannot manage time or priorities, students who stand no chance of surviving in the buisiness world.
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To oversimplify a bit, it's called "No Child Left Behind", AKA teach to the slowest and/or laziest kid in class and let the rest suffer in pure boredom and angst.
Re: Time Management (Score:5, Interesting)
You pegged it perfectly. It's the GRADES that matter. If someone is bright and gets their work done,
As someone else pointed out, students were lazing about in drunken stupors in the days before net access. I don't care about how someone washes out. Self control is PART of the unstated education of college, where you don't need Bathroom Passes.
As a much larger issue, in the 21st century, Content Lockdown mentalities are OBSOLETE. Yes, this terrifies many Powers-That-Be. Deal. The Information Age is here forever, and it's only going to get MORE intense.
Universities are ridiculously expensive anyway. They can afford the loss-leader (excepting lawsuits) of a Net connection.
This is just another instance of PowerLust disguised as Think of the Children.
No, not reasonable... (Score:3, Insightful)
Morality, social behavior, and personal habits are not modified in good ways by censorship or other controlling means. It might work right now for your children, but these are not children, they are college students - young adul
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The primary purpose of attending university is to get an education, not 24/7 Internet access.
Depends how you define "education" as classes are far from the only thing it encompasses. The best use of a university is to create connections and to network. What you know doesn't matter as much in life as who you know and how you can leverage your knowledge.
I can and do restrict online access of the children at home. My house, my rules.
So either your kids are idiots or young, well or you're an idiot/fool. Last I checked college students are adults and if you think 18 year old are kids and need to be babied I feel bad for your offspring (due to the horrible parenting they are recei
Re:Seems reasonable to me. (Score:5, Informative)
You pay for the access, you can do what ever the hell you want with it. I pay a technology fee which covers my access. I'm paying, I get to do what I want with it as long as I don't harm the universities network environment. I've read the contract very thoroughly.
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Mmm? Take Computer Science, for example. The Internet is indisputably the best academic resource for it. To a somewhat lesser degree it goes also for other areas of science. If anything, universities should be encouraging students to use Internet as a research and collaboration tool. It can be a platform for building a scientific community which could not exist in the world of paper journals.
Re:Seems reasonable to me. (Score:4, Interesting)
Oh and the thing is college and university student are adults, if you treat them like children how are they going to cope in the real world? A university policy of asking students not to engage in illegal activites or do things which could be offensive to others (while detailing how said offended person should react) is more than enough, more than likely Bombay doesn't like its bandwidth bills and so it cutting back
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http://www.tessums.com/cliche/images/kitty7.jpg [tessums.com]