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Dev.SN ♥ developers

posted by Dopefish on Monday February 17 2014, @10:00AM   Printer-friendly
from the government-should-mind-their-own-business dept.
mattie_p writes "MIT students won a hackathon last November with a non-functioning demo of Tidbit. The concept is to replace web advertising revenue with a tiny amount of Bitcoin mining on the user's browser. Out of the blue, the students were hit by a subpoena from the New Jersey Attorney General demanding that the founders 'turn over sensitive information including source codes, hosting websites, and all of the Bitcoin wallet addresses associated with Tidbit.'

At first MIT council referred the students to legal assistance from the EFF, who quickly came to their defense. Now there is a petition going around requesting the MIT administration support the students directly. Parallels are being drawn to Aaron Swartz, possibly because one of the authors of the recent petition is Prof. Hal Ableson, although details of the two cases have very little in common.

MIT President Reif has now come out strongly in support of the students--and in favor of academic freedom from interference by government."
 
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  • (Score: 2) by NovelUserName on Monday February 17 2014, @01:23PM

    by NovelUserName (768) on Monday February 17 2014, @01:23PM (#860)

    Isn't this what script blockers are for? If the mining script is too invasive, then more users will use script blockers and the return per user drops.

    It seems to me that this is basically the same situation as ads with malware. The higher the incidence rate of malware, the less people actually see ads. This means that ad companies have some incentive to keep their 'product' clean.

    Cheers

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