Divide grows on treatment of students in online breach

By Robert Weisman, Globe Staff  |  March 28, 2005

A small backlash has formed against the business schools of Harvard 
and some of the nation's other most prestigious universities for 
denying admission to more than 200 applicants who used a loophole 
devised by a computer hacker to peek at their admission files.

Last week, Dartmouth's Tuck School of Business, dissenting from 
Harvard's stern reaction to the digital trespassing, said it had 
accepted at least a few of the electronic intruders.

For administrators at Harvard, MIT, Duke, and Carnegie Mellon, the 
attempts to view confidential data this month were the electronic 
equivalent of breaking and entering, wholly unworthy of the future 
captains of American commerce. But others see the online breaches as 
a victimless crime by overeager young people accustomed to copying 
and pasting links onto websites. The contrasting reactions may expose 
not only a generational divide in Internet etiquette but also 
increasingly divergent mores in the physical and virtual worlds at a 
time when free downloading of music and open-source software is 
commonplace.

...

http://www.boston.com/news/education/higher/articles/2005/03/28/divide_grows_on_treatment_of_students_in_online_breach/


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