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FBI Seeks To Restrict University Student Freedoms 593

amigoro writes with a link to the Press Escape blog, which is discussing new guidelines suggest by the FBI for university administrations. The Federal Bureau, worried about the possibility of international espionage via our centers of learning, now sees the need to restrict the freedoms of university students for national security. "FBI is offering to brief faculty, students and staff on what it calls 'espionage indicators' aimed at identifying foreign agents. Unexplained affluence, failing to report overseas travel, showing unusual interest in information outside the job scope, keeping unusual work hours, unreported contacts with foreign nationals, unreported contact with foreign government, military, or intelligence officials, attempting to gain new accesses without the need to know, and unexplained absences are all considered potential espionage indicators."
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FBI Seeks To Restrict University Student Freedoms

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  • Since when (Score:2, Insightful)

    by Herkum01 ( 592704 )
    Did universities in the United States become part of the FBI?
    • Re:Since when (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Zeinfeld ( 263942 ) on Sunday June 24, 2007 @04:49PM (#19629859) Homepage
      Did universities in the United States become part of the FBI?

      Tell you what, when they arrest the Attorney General, Vice President and President and charge them with the long list of crimes they have committed against the US people, against the US constitution and against humanity, then lets talk about this stuff eh?

      They have by any objective standards ordered torture and committed other war crimes.

    • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

      by Shads ( 4567 )
      Nice to see we're dipping back into cold war era collective fear mongering.

      My government sickens me.
    • by KillerCow ( 213458 ) on Sunday June 24, 2007 @06:18PM (#19630427)
      IM In UR Skoolz

      Learnin UR Competitive Advantagez
      • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

        by jez9999 ( 618189 )
        For those people who don't have a freaking clue why this is funny, I just looked it up. Apparently, it's an:

        Internet meme. Protocol is "i'm in ur _____, _____ing ur _____." Started in 2006 on the game Counterstrike, when a player, asked where he was in game, responded "im in ur base killin ur d00dz." The meme gained a life of its own when attached to images of cats doing things.
        Yeah, I don't get it either. Ha, ha, I guess.
    • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

      This is not new, people. What do you think was going on in universities during the Viet Nam War, when people actually had the backbone to stand up and protest like they meant it? This is just the next turn of the wheel; history flows like a river and events repeat themselves.
      • Re:Since when (Score:4, Insightful)

        by Vellmont ( 569020 ) on Sunday June 24, 2007 @10:50PM (#19631819) Homepage

        when people actually had the backbone to stand up and protest like they meant it?

        I believe there was also this thing called the.. draft. Where people could be sent off to a war and potentially die. There were also a LOT more troops and a LOT more casualties, so I'd bet everyone knew at least one person who died, or had a friend/family member who knew someone who died. I'd bet everyone knew someone that was IN vietnam. As far as the Iraq war goes, I'm 3 degrees of seperation from someone who died, and I'd bet even THAT is rare.

        The point being, this war has a lot less personal connections to it than Vietnam did. It has nothing to do with "backbone". For the most part people are motivated by what affects them. No one is going to be drafted (especially people on a college campus), and a much smaller percentage of the populace is personally connected to it. So it really shouldn't be surprising that no one is rioting in the streets because of it. On the other hand we did have an election driven by ending this war, so it's not a total disconect.
    • Re:Since when (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Registered Coward v2 ( 447531 ) on Sunday June 24, 2007 @06:50PM (#19630629)
      Like it or not, commercial espionage is a very serious issue; despite what movies and TV shows say, espionage by "friendly" countries goes on every day. They're not worried about military secrets; rather they want industrial ones that can help their own companies; so ensuring US universities are sensitive to indicators of espionage, just as commercial firms should be aware of the potential as well.

      Despite the headline, the FBI is not asking universities to restrict anyone's freedom, all it is saying is "We will be glad to brief your staff on what to be aware of to help identify *indicators* of espionage, and ask that you tell us so we can investigate as appropriate."

      The article states:

      "US university students will not be able to work late at the campus, travel abroad, show interest in their colleagues' work, have friends outside the United States, engage in independent research, or make extra money without the prior consent of the authorities"

      and provides a link to the guidelines that purport to do that. However, if the original author ever bothered to RTFG, they'd notice that the guidelines were simply that - a set of things to watch for that *may* indicate espionage; and don't ask anyone to restrict anyone's ability to "work late at the campus, travel abroad, show interest in their colleagues' work, have friends outside the United States, engage in independent research, or make extra money without the prior consent of the authorities"

      Anyone who has had a US security clearance has received a similar brief on an annual basis; the idea is simply co-workers, who are in close contact with each other, are the best first line defense against espionage and should be aware of the warning signs.\\Of course, the truth is often not as newsworthy as some sensational spin.

  • FUD-O-Rama (Score:5, Informative)

    by rueger ( 210566 ) * on Sunday June 24, 2007 @04:43PM (#19629813) Homepage
    The referring article does open with:

    US university students will not be able to work late at the campus, travel abroad, show interest in their colleagues' work, have friends outside the United States, engage in independent research, or make extra money without the prior consent of the authorities, according to a set of guidelines given to administrators by the FBI.
    It appears that that paragraph is a gross exaggeration of what the FBI is proposing, and indeed further in the article University spokespeople talk about a possible "chilling effect", not about the kind of wholesale assault on freedoms suggested.

    I don't like the FBI sticking their nose into other people's business, but let's at least try to represent the problems accurately.

    • by Colin Smith ( 2679 )
      That's how you tighten the cuffs.

       
      • ...and? (Score:5, Insightful)

        by Sycraft-fu ( 314770 ) on Sunday June 24, 2007 @06:34PM (#19630543)
        That changes nothing about what the original poster was saying. Vastly overstating a case does no good, and often does harm. If you tell me that the government is severely fucking over my freedoms, and I then come to discover you are full of shit, I am much less likely to listen to you in the future. The whole "boy who cried wolf" thing.

        If you want to get your message out you need to be accurate. In this case, this whole thing is amazingly overstated. The guidelines are for people with security clearance, and the FBI isn't suggesting that universities apply them to students. That isn't to argue that this is a good thing, but please let's be accurate with what is going on.

        Slashdot could be a pretty good source for news on governmental restrictions of freedom, but most of the time they vastly overstate what is going on. Thus it doesn't take someone long to conclude the people are full of shit and start ignoring it. Trying to rationalize it with a pithy saying does nothing but further show that it is about sensationalism, not truth.
    • Re:FUD-O-Rama (Score:5, Informative)

      by Eadwacer ( 722852 ) on Sunday June 24, 2007 @04:56PM (#19629895)
      In fact, when you compare the blog item with the Boston Globe article, you find that the Globe makes no mention of the linked .pdf with the "guidelines" in it. Those are from a document intended for government employees, and make no sense when you try to apply them to academia. What the Globe mentions are suggestions that profs secure their laptops when overseas, and that they know who they are talking when they talk about high tech work with defense applications.
      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        by Lockejaw ( 955650 )

        Those are from a document intended for government employees, and make no sense when you try to apply them to academia.

        Yes, those guidelines seem like they would generate a lot of false positives at a university:

        • unexplained affluence -- generally it's just some kid with parents who pay for everything
        • failing to report overseas travel -- to whom? it's really not the university's business
        • showing unusual interest in information outside the job scope -- many students are still discovering new interests
        • keepin
    • Re:FUD-O-Rama (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Kohath ( 38547 ) on Sunday June 24, 2007 @05:07PM (#19629983)
      Yeah, the FBI wants people to report suspicious activity. Wow!! I'm outraged.

      The problem with the mock-outrage and crocodile tears for things like this is that it desensitizes people. When freedoms are actually, genuinely under assault, it'll get posted on Slashdot and everyone will ask "What is Slashdot whining about this time? Should I read the article to find out how it's misinformation again, or should I just save time and assume it's misinformation, like it usually is?"

      Freedom is important. It's far too important for this. It's important to be vigilant to protect it. Pretending there's an assault on freedom when there isn't don't count as vigilance -- rather it provides cover so the real anti-freedom measures get lost in the noise.
      • Re:FUD-O-Rama (Score:5, Insightful)

        by gorehog ( 534288 ) on Sunday June 24, 2007 @06:12PM (#19630383)

        Unexplained affluence, failing to report overseas travel, showing unusual interest in information outside the job scope, keeping unusual work hours, unreported contacts with foreign nationals, unreported contact with foreign government, military, or intelligence officials, attempting to gain new accesses without the need to know

        Look at this list. The problem with it is that it takes things that are NORMAL for intellectuals to try to do and calls them suspicious.

        I always thought the "need to know" was assumed to be granted to the people except in special cases where the government classifies information. If it's not specifically restricted then we have a right to it. This mandate from the Feds puts students and professors under a nasty microscope.

        How does one explain their affluence? Most rich people are never asked where the money came from. Interrogating affluence leads to nothing more than vindictive sophistry.

        Who do I have to report overseas travel to? Isn't it enough to inform the State Department that I travel? now I have to report my summer vacation plans to the school administration?

        Information outside the job scope? So, if I'm a humanities student and taking welding classes at night I'm a terrorist?

        A lot of people go into academics because of the flexible schedule. In that context what are unusual hours?

        Unreported contacts with foreign nationals? Aside from academic and intellectual interest in world affairs and the question of who is the supervisor waiting for a report...this is a violation of the fourth (fifth?) amendment protections which guarantee you to be secure in your personal effects. Oh yeah...there's also something about freedom of speech.

        unreported contact with foreign government? same as above. WTF, if I choose to emigrate I have to inform my school administration?

        I've only provided one example per case. What it comes down to is that EVERY item on that list has many many legitimate purposes to exist. What the FBI might really be on about here is the chance that aggressive academics might be able to make a case for toppling this government by legal means. I think the Feds are circling wagons and playing defense.

        • Re:FUD-O-Rama (Score:4, Insightful)

          by Kohath ( 38547 ) on Sunday June 24, 2007 @06:39PM (#19630571)
          Once again, these are not relevant points. You can congratulate yourself for spotting something inconsistent all you want.

          When someone says "The FBI is coming in their uniforms to get us all!", it's not really useful to point out that the FBI generally doesn't wear uniforms -- they tend to wear suits. But the point, again, is that they're not coming to get us all.

          The article says that the FBI is asking people to watch out for certain behaviors. Who is less free because of that? What are they less free to do? What freedom has been taken away?

          What the FBI might really be on about here is the chance that aggressive academics might be able to make a case for toppling this government by legal means. I think the Feds are circling wagons and playing defense.

          I suggest building a concrete bunker. Maybe you still have one from Y2K. And tinfoil hats -- always.
          • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

            by gorehog ( 534288 )

            You are wrong. Eliminating wrong leads is one thing. Investigating people where no crime has been committed? That is wrong. What is not relevant about the FBI asking for reports on innocent activities? Do you really want the FBI researching every dead end that college administrators could generate?

            I never said anything about the FBI coming to get us all. They just want to chill the elements in society who might investigate them. Notice, please, that this request was not made to Construction companies

    • Re:FUD-O-Rama (Score:5, Interesting)

      by MonGuSE ( 798397 ) on Sunday June 24, 2007 @05:18PM (#19630051)
      I actually don't consider this FUD since I've seen suggestions at my university for all students to have to submit a reason with evidence why they missed a class or go before academic review and possibly get a quarter off. It has not flown yet because of so many holes in the argument but I was wondering why it even mattered that much. Sometimes people need a day off, in America we don't get enough of them anymore. Although I will admit students have it comparatively easy in relation to working stiffs.

      Also if you watched the Daily Show on Thursday John had a guy on promoting his new book called 'Quantico' that had some interesting information about his interactions with the FBI. He specifically stated that in the near future there would be surveillance tech installed at all campuses assumably in an attempt to combat domestic terrorism. Because you know so much of it happens on a school campus. He also said the higher ups in the homeland security divisions, in the meetings he got to attend and discuss matters with them are showing a keen interest into this 'new' arena of terrorism and not concerned with foreign terrorists as much anymore.

      This all sounds like big brother and McCarthyism combined. Do we never learn that while we need agencies looking for the next terrorist attack what we don't need is to create an environment in which we loose the very things we are trying to protect. Whack a mole indeed.

      The only information they need to disseminate is be vigilante, it is everyone's responsibility. By trying to become big brother no one is vigilant because they either hate big brother and don't want to help him or they have a false sense of security.

      Lastly profiling does not work as one would assume. You can always find things about people that seem to fit into a 'mold' but really it is a self fulfilling prophecy. Profiling only helps to give you a general idea of who you may or may not be looking for but the person you are looking for may not fit that profile and a person that fits that profile is more than likely not to be who you are looking for. Its just a tool to help you get started in a direction when you don't have better evidence to go with or to possibly help you out when you get desperate. When you apply it with no context or no crime then it becomes worthless because you get 99.99% false positives and when you get that .01% positive your already assuming that its a false positive and overlook it. This new approach by the FBI is wrong on so many levels its retarded. Everyone is a criminal unless cleared...
  • by lufo ( 949075 ) on Sunday June 24, 2007 @04:46PM (#19629839)

    unreported contact with foreign [...] intelligence officials
    As well as been called by a 00 number and introducing themselves as "Surname, Name Surname" might be considered highly suspiciuos.
  • Paranoid (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Wellington Grey ( 942717 ) on Sunday June 24, 2007 @04:47PM (#19629843) Homepage Journal
    Federal agents are visiting some of the New England's top universities... to warn university heads about the dangers of foreign spies and terrorists stealing sensitive academic research.

    FBI is offering to brief faculty, students and staff on what it calls "espionage indicators" aimed at identifying foreign agents.

    Unexplained affluence, failing to report overseas travel, showing unusual interest in information outside the job scope, keeping unusual work hours, unreported contacts with foreign nationals, unreported contact with foreign government, military, or intelligence officials, attempting to gain new accesses without the need to know, and unexplained absences are all considered potential espionage indicators.


    What a paranoid and counterproductive list. Isn't the information in bold just about everyone who works in academia?

    -Grey [wellingtongrey.net]
    • Re: (Score:3, Funny)

      by shystershep ( 643874 ) *
      Perhaps you missed the word 'unusual.' If it is something that everyone in academia does, it wouldn't be unusual, now would it?
      • Re:Paranoid (Score:5, Interesting)

        by Wellington Grey ( 942717 ) on Sunday June 24, 2007 @04:59PM (#19629919) Homepage Journal

        Perhaps you missed the word 'unusual.'


        Well, it's been my experience that the 'usual' person isn't interested in anything that wasn't on TV, so this would have quite a chilling effect for anyone, like myself, who actually enjoys learning things.

        -Grey [wellingtongrey.net]
      • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

        by porcupine8 ( 816071 )
        In that case, I challenge you to tell me what working hours would be distinctly unusual in academia. Some people work 9-5, some people work noon-midnight, some people work on the weekends and Wednesday, some people work from home unless they have a class or meeting, some people come in for a while in the morning and then again after dinner... Nothing is particularly usual or unusual, particularly if the academic in question doesn't have a family to get home to (including those whose families live in a diffe
    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by Gorshkov ( 932507 )

      Unexplained affluence, failing to report overseas travel, showing unusual interest in information outside the job scope, keeping unusual work hours, unreported contacts with foreign nationals, unreported contact with foreign government, military, or intelligence officials, attempting to gain new accesses without the need to know, and unexplained absences are all considered potential espionage indicators.

      What a paranoid and counterproductive list. Isn't the information in bold just about everyone who work

  • Serious? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by BWJones ( 18351 ) * on Sunday June 24, 2007 @04:48PM (#19629855) Homepage Journal
    Unexplained affluence

    Ummmm, that is what an education is supposed to get you.

    failing to report overseas travel

    Oh, my students are supposed to check in with me everywhere they go?

    showing unusual interest in information outside the job scope

    Hey! I want my students to explore new and interesting things. That is what they are here to do.

    keeping unusual work hours

    They had *better* be working their asses off. :-)

    unreported contacts with foreign nationals

    Ummmm, collaboration? There are folks outside the US that *are* doing exciting science you know...

    unreported contact with foreign government, military, or intelligence officials

    OK, I might give them this.

    attempting to gain new accesses without the need to know

    Oh, jeez..... these people have been in government too long. Compartmentalized information is certainly appropriate, but in an educational setting, where people are not doing sensitive work? Come on now, if you are involved in classified work, you have to pass background checks and *obtain* clearance, particularly for compartmentalized projects.

    and unexplained absences are all considered potential espionage indicators.

    Sure, whatever. They might also be skiing...

    • Mod this up, please. I work in a University and writing a post like this one was my first thought too.

      attempting to gain new accesses without the need to know is just cracking me up... People who wrote this probably think that scientific research is a process most resembling folding a stack of envelopes.

    • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

      I must be an espionage risk then.

      I've had a great deal of contact with foreign nationals.
      I have pursued a lot of information outside of the scope of my job (in fact, I'm often called in on projects that have nothing to do with my profession because of my weird set of experience).
      I've been known to keep some truly bizare hours.
      And, truth be known, I've probably had some contact with foreign gov, mil, or intel officials in the past because of the rather strange set of friends that I've had (some of which had
  • "...showing unusual interest in information outside the job scope..." A true thirst for knowledge will arrouse suspicion? Do we really want this? Controlling information is the first step down a nasty road.
  • by pcgamez ( 40751 ) * on Sunday June 24, 2007 @04:52PM (#19629877)
    [quote]
    Unexplained affluence, failing to report overseas travel, showing unusual interest in information outside the job scope, keeping unusual work hours, unreported contacts with foreign nationals, unreported contact with foreign government, military, or intelligence officials, attempting to gain new accesses without the need to know, and unexplained absences are all considered potential espionage indicators.
    [/quote]

    Other than the first point, that describes a large portion of the college population (especially at the graduate level).

    The problem with a guide like this is that it returns too many false positives. The odds of a single person who fit most of those characteristics out of a group of 20,000 being a terrorist is almost nil. Yes, it will be true in some cases, but not in enough to warrant the massive investment in time. All this does it put people's minds at ease that the government is Doing Something.
    • This is why everyone should switch to a major of Business or English Lit or Basket Weaving. Let 'em reap what they sow. Hasten the demise of the police state by the only means possible -- passive resistance.

      Mal-2
    • I especially got a kick out of "keeping unusual work hours". Seriously, who *doesn't* do this at a University?
  • Come on (Score:3, Insightful)

    by chuckymonkey ( 1059244 ) <charles@d@burton.gmail@com> on Sunday June 24, 2007 @04:53PM (#19629883) Journal
    OHHHHH NOOOEEESSS! Teh trrists r in ur skools stealin ur secrets! Seriously though, when does it end? At what point do we say enough is enough with this fearmongering?
    • by zogger ( 617870 ) on Sunday June 24, 2007 @06:41PM (#19630579) Homepage Journal
      The nation has been de-balled. It is a fait accompli. Neutered. It's mostly over, and the goons won. You can't do anything about it besides *talk*, and pretty soon that will be going the way of speech in china, their poster boy model nation, full technology, full police state, one major party, in the US it is the globalist party with two wings and their platform is full technofeudalism...

          If you do anything besides talk, it is considered a major crime, and you therefore are a criminal, maybe a "terrorist", so it becomes self fulfilling prophecy of their's.

        I remember a lot of civil disobedience to try and stop thoroughly disgusting governmental action, and it was dangerous then, but now, it is beyond dangerous, and they just won't put up with it. They have all the power they need now and plenty of order followers and a cowed-enough population who have more interest in entertainments and just making a living, a desperate living for a lot of people. Bread and circuses tempered with governmental "legal terrorism" makes for a controlled population.

      Voting doesn't work, that is obvious. Even among the intellectually aware and politically active, the meme of "don't waste your vote!!!" is still quite strong and repeated endlessly, like some cult chant, and results in the same type and form and demographic makeup of government, election after election after election, which is, the completely corrupt R and D power sharing cartel which has hijacked government and runs it as a power and jobs sharing racket.

      I vote, but it is inertia, more to say I still vote than for any expectation it will actually mean anything.

      The short phrase is *sigh*

      What's left, blog about it? You can't even go protest, step outside of the completely illegal and unConstitutional "free speech zones" and their mercenaries will arrest and/or beat you. Be a big enoug hassle to them, you go on the lists, and eventually won't be able to travel or change jobs even. It's coming. The population has sucked up the no fly list so far, no protests, meekly stand in line for the perv search and the humbling glares.

      I knew once that got accepted without mass protest it was all over.

      And stuff like that. Too tired to list them all, but there's a big list.

      I'm not a pessimist, but I will consider myself a realist. We have a defacto low threshold but growing fast one party police state. It is only going to get worse for a long time to come now. They have found out they can get away with the largest crimes, with no revolt from the people, and a mostly controlled and tame media who go along with it, so small crimes are just part of the system now.

      I think the best people can do now is try and stay as free and independent as possible, especially inside their own hearts, and see what opportunities present themselves in the future. Who knows, pigs may fly someday and we might get humble and honest and decent government some election time.

      It could happen. Low odds, but still possible.
  • by Smight ( 1099639 ) <{moc.liamg} {ta} {bsdnirgluos}> on Sunday June 24, 2007 @04:55PM (#19629889)
    Looks to me like 99% of all college students meet quite a few of their espionage indicators.

    Here's an idea. How about not passing laws that further disillusion Americans into becoming terrorists?
    This is like lowering the speed limit to try and stop drag racing.
    • Re: (Score:3, Funny)

      by CrazyJim1 ( 809850 )
      This is like lowering the speed limit to try and stop drag racing.

      I know what you mean. It's not like people will stop drag racing. They'll just be doing it slower.
  • by Animats ( 122034 ) on Sunday June 24, 2007 @04:56PM (#19629897) Homepage

    The DIA guidelines on "combating the insider threat" [ncix.gov] refer to people with security clearances of at least SECRET. That's a standard list, and goes back to at least the 1950s. The article doesn't make a connection with it being applied to universities.

    What's puzzling about this is that it's totally out of touch with reality. The USSR was interested in American R&D, but that's because they had an industrial base and weapons plants that could use R&D. No enemy of the US today has anything like that. (North Korea and Iran, maybe, but they're mostly trying to do things the superpowers did in the 1950s.) Al-Queda consists of loosely affiliated small groups that use off the shelf weaponry. This seems a mis-aimed effort, which isn't unusual for the current administration.

  • by mc6809e ( 214243 ) on Sunday June 24, 2007 @04:58PM (#19629911)

    There is nothing in that article the describes the restriction of students' freedoms.

    Instead, the FBI is advising these universities on how they can protect themselves from those that would steal important research.

    As bad as the government might be, I don't see what good it does to distort the facts.
  • at my university, the lights are always on because GRAD STUDENTS DON'T SLEEP. my office has a hammock!

    looks like they'll be locking us all up. good thing: now i can sleep!
  • Perhaps with the exception of frequent meetings with foreign government agents, I think the FBI just described the vast majority of college students.

    1) Unexplained affluence: What trust fund kiddie brags about the money he has coming from his dad?
    2) Failure to report overseas travel: Sex tourism is a big industry, mang.
    3) Interest outside job scope: They're called hobbies, guys.
    4) Unusual work hours: We're fucking students. We go to class during the day. We work for our beer money when we can.
    5) Unexplained
  • Read TFA (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Lambticc ( 563530 ) on Sunday June 24, 2007 @05:17PM (#19630041)
    From the guidelines:

    We should report observations of one or more of the following indicators pertaining to a person with access to classified information...

    This seems to make perfect sense. If schools want the money that comes from doing classified research they should be vigilant in making sure that that research stays classified.
  • by CompMD ( 522020 ) on Sunday June 24, 2007 @05:54PM (#19630281)
    Why are slashdot readers more prone to going apeshit insane over a blog post? Here is the website [fbi.gov] of the actual FBI group that works to protect domestic research and technology. It is a good read and will communicate far more useful, accurate information than a blog post.
  • by Trerro ( 711448 ) on Sunday June 24, 2007 @06:35PM (#19630553)

    "FBI is offering to brief faculty, students and staff on what it calls 'espionage indicators' aimed at identifying foreign agents. Unexplained affluence
    You mean, like the affluence that lets you afford the world's most expensive university system?

    failing to report overseas travel
    Yes, I'm sure the when the student visits his family on spring break, he's going to be in a huge hurry to file a report.

    showing unusual interest in information outside the job scope
    Oh noes! A FOREIGN SCHOLAR is interested in learning. EVERYBODY PANIC!

    keeping unusual work hours
    Ignoring the joke majors, good luck finding a college student who DOESN'T occasionally need to do work at 5 AM, whether the result of too much work, too much procrastination, or as is usually the case, both.

    unreported contacts with foreign nationals
    Yeah, I'm sure he's going to fill out paperwork every time he has an IM conversation with a friend from his home country.

    unreported contact with foreign government, military, or intelligence officials
    This is probably about the only item on this entire list that DOES deserve attention, though even here - it better be military and intelligence, as 'government' includes things like the guys he's getting the loan from.

    attempting to gain new accesses without the need to know
    Horrifically vague. There's a big difference between asking for a tour of a building relevant to your major so you know how things actually work, and trying to lie your way into a military base. I suppose the 'need to know' clause is supposed to fix that problem, but it doesn't. If you have enough of a passion for learning that you're coming overseas to do it, you're probably a rather curious person by nature, and probably have quite a bit of random knowledge that you don't 'need to know.'

    and unexplained absences
    Does anyone seriously bother to explain to most of their professors why they were absent? Can anyone say with a straight face that they've NEVER cut class without a valid reason - ESPECIALLY when you get that one professor you know you're going to learn absolutely nothing from? Overall, this list might not be quite as bad as the old duct tape announcement, but it does show about the same level of paranoia.
  • by bigbigbison ( 104532 ) on Sunday June 24, 2007 @07:35PM (#19630863) Homepage
    I'm a grad student and I have a hard enough time turning my student's grades in on time. I doubt I'm going to get around to report anything to the FBI. I'm making less than $13000 a year. That isn't enough for me to spy on my students. Give me a few thousand and I might think about it.
  • by grundy ( 151557 ) <explodingskull.gmail@com> on Sunday June 24, 2007 @07:43PM (#19630903) Homepage
    Warning signs from the FBI document:

    Repeated irresponsibility.
    An "above the rules" attitude.
    Financial irresponsibility.
    Repeated impulsive behaviors.
    Extreme immaturity.
    Willingness to violate the rights of others to achieve one's own ends.
    Willingness to break rules or violations of laws and regulations.

    Sounds like most gov'ment agencies, FBI, CIA, Congress, Executive Branch, etc. etc. etc. Phone it in, start the investigation...
  • Confusing, but (Score:3, Interesting)

    by Antony-Kyre ( 807195 ) on Sunday June 24, 2007 @08:45PM (#19631229)
    Confusing, but here is what I have to say anyways.

    Unless the FBI plans on making this into law, their wanting to do whatever has no legal effect.

    Do you honestly believe this will affect what students do? Good universities won't stand for restricting freedoms.
  • It's worth it. (Score:5, Insightful)

    by moxley ( 895517 ) on Monday June 25, 2007 @08:18AM (#19634267)
    There have already been great points made about this -

    But I will say this - the more we allow authorities to destroy our quality of life over fears of terrorism, the less our country is worthy of such 'protection.' If all of our freedoms are gone, what do we have left that is worth protecting; what remains that makes America so great? Don't get me wrong, I love my country, that is why everytime the government says that they are doing something that goes against our very principles to protect us I am suspicious and disgusted.

    It is a fact of life that you could die or be killed at any time. It is just a fact, it doesn't matter how much money you have, who you are, or where you live. 20 year olds can have heart attacks, a meteor impact could hit the planet and start the cycle of life all over again from the beginning. Someone could go nuts and kill you - such is the price of living in freedom.

    Besides, this government is way too corrupt and self preserving to truly protect this country and it's people, even if that is what they are truly trying to do on some level.

    It's worth it. I would rather live in freedom then take up space in a police state.
  • by FuzzyDaddy ( 584528 ) on Monday June 25, 2007 @09:38AM (#19634887) Journal
    I just finished Albrecht Folsing's biography of Albert Einstein. He lived through, in his life time, two major attempts to suppress academic freedoms. The first was in Germany in the decade leading up to World War II. The second was many years later, while he was at Princeton, during the McCarthy era. He also saw, pre WW I, how german intellectuals got swept up in patriotic fervor, which he refused to do. He spoke out each time.

    Which gets me thinking about our own individual roles in safeguarding our rights. I recently turned down a job because the employement contract required would have signed over all rights to all works I produced during my employment there, regardless of when or where I worked on them, or about what they concerned. I wrote a later to HR and the hiring manager explaining my objections, and why I wasn't accepting the position.

    I never got a response, and it's quite likely they just thought I was some sort of crank. My wife, although supportive, also thought I was some sort of crank. And perhaps I am.

    But I feel very good about it because it was my chance to push back on the systematic encroachment on personal freedoms. At least two people with decision making authority have seen it come up as an issue. And I don't feel like I've sold myself short.

    It was a small stand - I can't say I wouldn't have done it differently if I was desperate for a job. But the small ways matter too - it's letting things slip away a little at a time that is the biggest threat to our freedoms.

  • by l3v1 ( 787564 ) on Monday June 25, 2007 @10:59AM (#19635991)
    ...projects, phd students, researchers, most of them meet almost all of the criteria mentioned in the article. Let's see.

    Unexplained affluence

    Maybe a valid point, but I fail to see how this is the FBI's concern, tax dept. might be interested though.

    failing to report overseas travel

    Hmm. So, they need you to report where you travel ? Nice. I remember times in my country when you had to do this, and then they didn't allow you to travel even if you reported that you wanted to go. Moreover, you reporting your traveling wishes made you a suspect of ... well, anything you can think of.

    showing unusual interest in information outside the job scope

    Which is something I and my coworkers almost constantly do. As researchers and scientists - however funny that might sound to some people - I'd even expect my colleagues to do so.

    keeping unusual work hours

    Now come on :)) What is unusual ? Working late ? Sometimes coming in late ? Sometimes working during the weekend ? At night ? Then we're all doomed :)

    unreported contacts with foreign nationals

    Now that's something I like. I mean I shouldn't talk with my foreign acquaintances anymore ? I shouldn't get new ones ? Or I could but report them beforehand ? Rrright.

    unreported contact with foreign government, military, or intelligence officials

    I might agree with this to some extent, but it is still too vaguely formulated to be trusted. The problem is, you can't trust these people that they won't use this vagueness in the formulation to turn everyone they'd like into a suspect.

    attempting to gain new accesses without the need to know

    With this I also have one problem: we're not the military here. Need-to-know is not that black and white in the real world as in the service. And not that black and white like they thought it to be during the cold war. Something that at times might be considered a security measure, might be just a full blown social hindrance later on.

    unexplained absences

    I can't even remember how many university classes I have skipped. 'Cause of work, of laziness, or 'cause I just didn't like them. Yet I managed to get two masters and a phd and I'm working, I'm paying my taxes and I consider myself a patriot. Bzzt, wrong, you missed your classes, spy scum !
     

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