Yale oversteps free speech
My hero for the day, against Yale no less. Some people still have the character to fight back.
I still don't understand why they objected to something obviously useful for their students.
I still don't understand why they objected to something obviously useful for their students.
I mean some sort of fundamental, subconscious link in the minds of those at the forefront of the digital revolution - people capable of putting together complex information systems like this - with the spirit of freedom, productive innovation and "forward-thinkingness" that brings us all here to the Gulch.
Everywhere I look I see examples of people who understand the opportunities and value-creation possible to us in this Information Age, who are, naturally, hampered by the more primitive impulse of government regulation (or in this case, bureaucratic, lame-brain school-administration stuff).
The Lavabit founder guy is another example:
http://www.atlassociety.org/brc/blog/201...
I also feel like higher-ed and the federal government are in bed together. I haven't done enough research on this yet, but some of things I hear lead me to this intuitive hypothesis. Check out this nonsense from NPR when you get a sec:
http://www.npr.org/blogs/codeswitch/2014...
(Try not to get too mad when you read that last link)