The Chronicle of Higher Education: ‘Politics of Control’ Leads a Law Student to Challenge Digital-Copyright Act. Q&A with Benjamin G. Edelman. There are a few specific examples that make it all fit together. Certainly, this filtering is an example of control, someone getting between you and where you want to go. You want to read about breast cancer, N2H2 says that that’s pornography, and so they won’t let you. [Tomalak’s Realm]

Campaign for Cambridge Science

Campaign for Cambridge Science

Cambridge University, which along with MIT and Stanford, has a liberal policy on academics’ IP rights, is proposing to change it to a much more repressive regime. As usual, the people behind this have no idea of what they are effectively doing — killing the geese that lay the golden eggs — and indeed seem contemptuous of the notion that there is any connection between liberal attitudes towards IP and industrial creativity. Here’s a splendid polemic by Ross Anderson against this idiocy. For a comparison between Silicon Valley and Route 128 (the Massachussetts equivalent) see here. And here’s how MIT handles Faculty IP.