University of Oregon refusing to help ID music pirates

University of Oregon refusing to help ID music pirates

The Associated Press

EUGENE, Ore. — A lawsuit brought by the recording industry is pitting piracy against privacy.

Oregon Attorney General Hardy Myers filed court papers this week seeking to free the University of Oregon from having to identify students who illegally downloaded music.

In August, a group of recording companies filed a lawsuit accusing 17 Oregon students of music piracy. The students are identified only by an Internet address, and industry lawyers have asked the university to identify the students.

Similar suits have been filed across the U.S., and universities and colleges have been cooperating. The University of Oregon has traced the file sharing to dorm rooms and users of a wireless network, but officials can’t be sure who shared the music without interviewing students and examining their private computers, The Oregonian newspaper reported.

University officials contend that would violate privacy rights.

“University (officials) feel like they are being asked to do the investigation on behalf of the company when it’s not really their role,” said Stephanie Soden, spokeswoman for the Oregon Department of Justice.

Since 2003, the music industry has taken legal action against more than 20,000 people suspected of using the Internet to make illegal copies of songs.

The Recording Industry Association of America could not be reached for comment after hours. But Jonathan Lamy, a spokesman for the association, told an Ohio University forum this week that the music business is “hemorrhaging” jobs and money and the lawsuits are a last resort.

Ray Beckerman, a New York copyright attorney, said Oregon is the first state he knows of that is seeking to protect the identity of students accused of piracy.

If so, it would be the second time in months that Oregon has been involved in a key lawsuit involving music piracy. A Beaverton woman filed a class-action lawsuit against the recording industry in August, accusing it of illegal spying and intimidation in its crackdown.

The Science Education Myth

Business Week: The Science Education Myth

Forget the conventional wisdom. U.S. schools are turning out more capable science and engineering grads than the job market can support

Kentucky: A pledge for more college diversity

Lexington Herald-Leader: A pledge for more college diversity
KENTUCKY JOINS SCHOOLS VOWING TO CLOSE GAPS

In a coordinated stab at one of higher education’s most pressing problems, the Kentucky Council on Postsecondary Education and some of the nation’s largest university systems pledged yesterday to cut in half the achievement gaps for minority and low-income students on their campuses by 2015.

Poll: Many Californians believe college is key, but out of reach

Union Tribune: Poll: Many Californians believe college is key, but out of reach

Many Californians believe a college education is key but consider it out of reach, a new poll says.

Nearly two-thirds, or 64 percent, of people surveyed by the Public Policy Institute of California, said a person must have a college education to succeed in the workplace. Three-fourths, or 76 percent, said the state’s college system was “very important” to the future of California.

Wisconsin: Minority professors ‘rare’ in sciences

Milwaukee Journal Sentinel: Minority professors ‘rare’ in sciences

Women and minorities are significantly underrepresented as professors in science and engineering departments at the top research universities across the country, including the University of Wisconsin-Madison and UW-Milwaukee.

Embattled Barnard Anthropologist Is Awarded Tenure

The New York Times: Embattled Barnard Anthropologist Is Awarded Tenure

An assistant professor of anthropology at Barnard College whose scholarship on the use of archaeology in Israel has attracted both fierce criticism and scholarly support has been approved for tenure, Barnard officials said in a statement released yesterday.

At a West Virginia University, New Protections for Pagans

The New York Times: At a West Virginia University, New Protections for Pagans

At Marshall University, pagan students are now allowed to miss classes to observe religious holidays or festivals.

A new policy makes the university in Huntington, W.Va., with an enrollment of about 14,000, possibly the only college in the country to protect pagans formally from being penalized for missing classes, although many institutions have policies intended to protect students of every faith.

Gaza College Students Trapped in Gaza

AP: Gaza College Students Trapped in Gaza

Mona Bkheet’s academic year is under way at Southern Illinois University, but the civil engineering student is far from the classroom, stranded in the Hamas-controlled Gaza Strip by an Israeli blockade.

Human rights groups say 670 Palestinian students have become trapped in Gaza since the Islamic militants took over the territory this summer and Israel halted travel in and out. More than 30 of the students are enrolled at U.S. universities.

MassBay president gets no-confidence vote

The Boston Globe: MassBay president gets no-confidence vote

Faculty members at Massachusetts Bay Community College have delivered a decisive no-confidence vote in President Carole Berotte Joseph, following months of unrest on campus and intensifying the pressure against the leader of the Wellesley-based school.

Swastika Painted on Columbia Professor’s Door

The New York Times: Swastika Painted on Columbia Professor’s Door

A swastika was found spray-painted on a Jewish professor’s office door yesterday morning at Teachers College at Columbia University, the second time in less than a month that one of the college’s professors has been the target of bias.

The professor, Elizabeth Midlarsky, a clinical psychologist who has done studies on the Holocaust, said the college’s associate provost called to notify her of the swastika. Ms. Midlarsky said it was actually the third time in recent weeks that she had been the target of bias.

When mascots attack

The Chronicle: When Mascots Attack

Mascot-on-mascot violence.

Is it a growing problem? A couple of videos making the rounds on the Internet suggest that it might be. In one, we see the University of Houston’s cougar and the University of Oregon’s duck battle it out on the sidelines. In another, viewers witness Coastal Carolina University’s chanticleer getting the best of James Madison University’s Duke Dog.

Butts are kicked! Fake punches are thrown! Egos are slightly bruised!

To see the videos, go to http://chronicle.com/multimedia

You will be shocked. Or mildly amused. One or the other.

Full-Time Professors Report High Levels of Job Satisfaction, Survey Finds

The Chronicle: Full-Time Professors Report High Levels of Job Satisfaction, Survey Finds

Full-time faculty members at four-year colleges are happier with their jobs than most American workers, according to a new survey by the pension giant TIAA-CREF.

The company polled 300 full-time faculty members, who had each been employed for three or more years at a single four-year institution, about their views on their careers, work-life balance, and retirement expectations.

Inside Higher Ed: A Satisfied Full-Time Faculty

Many administrators complain about the many complaints of their faculty members, but it turns out that most professors (at least full timers at four-year colleges) are pretty happy with their jobs.

Free-Speech Group Accuses U. of Delaware of ‘Thought Reform’

The Chronicle News Blog: Free-Speech Group Accuses U. of Delaware of ‘Thought Reform’

The University of Delaware is engaging in “systematic thought reform,” according to a prominent free-speech group. Said free-speech group is basing its conclusions on “a selective citation of documents,” according to the university.

ouro College Sells Online Division for $190-Million

The Chronicle News Blog: Touro College Sells Online Division for $190-Million

Touro College completed the sale of its separately accredited online division on Wednesday, for the previously undisclosed price of $190-million.

Iowa: Regents vote to arm campus police

Des Moines Register: Regents vote to arm campus police

The Iowa Board of Regents approved 6-to-2 a campus security plan that would require sworn police officers at Iowa’s public universities to carry firearms.

Student in Florida Taser Incident Apologizes and Gets Probation Instead of Prosecution

The Chronicle: Student in Florida Taser Incident Apologizes and Gets Probation Instead of Prosecution

Student in Florida Taser Incident Apologizes and Gets Probation
The University of Florida and Andrew W. Meyer, the student whom campus police officers shocked with a Taser last month, have resolved their differences with forgiveness and letters of apology.

University to students: ‘All whites are racist’

WorldNetDaily: University to students: ‘All whites are racist’

A mandatory University of Delaware program requires residence hall students to acknowledge that “all whites are racist” and offers them “treatment” for any incorrect attitudes regarding class, gender, religion, culture or sexuality they might hold upon entering the school, according to a civil rights group.

New York: Plan to expand role of universities in K-12

Inside Higher Ed: A special panel reviewing higher education in New York State is preparing a plan that would call for radically increased role for colleges in working with elementary and secondary schools. In what appears to be a trial balloon, parts of the plan were revealed to The New York Sun, which reported that “education empowerment zones” would be created in which college faculty members would play more of a role in helping with the curriculum, and colleges might set up “early college high schools” and other links between higher ed and K-12. A preliminary report from the panel — appointed by Gov. Eliot Spitzer — is expected by December 1. Sources familiar with the panel’s deliberations told Inside Higher Ed that the emphasis described in the Sun article was correct, but that references to a huge infusion of funds for higher education were not, given the state’s overall budget picture.

Florida: Tasered Student Avoids Criminal Charges

AP: Tasered Student Avoids Criminal Charges

A University of Florida student who was shocked with a Taser after persistently questioning Sen. John Kerry will avoid criminal charges by apologizing and complying with terms of a voluntary 18-month probation, authorities said Tuesday.

Live From Ohio: Rock Stars and the RIAA

Inside Higher Ed: Live From Ohio: Rock Stars and the RIAA

Ohio University played host on Tuesday to a panel that hit close to home as music experts, critics of and sympathizers to illegal downloading, and a Rock and Roll Hall of Famer discussed the finer points of peer-to-peer file sharing.

The debate is hardly theoretical at a campus that has received 100 pre-litigation letters this year from the Recording Industry Association of America as part of the group’s controversial tactic of forcing college administrators into a reluctant enforcer role against illegal downloading. Partially as a result, Ohio University announced an unusually strict policy of blocking all peer-to-peer file-sharing traffic earlier this year. To provide a legal alternative, the institution has since joined Ruckus, a subscription-based music service that is currently free to students.