Archive for the ‘universities’ Category.

55,000 names and SSNs stolen at UT Austin

United Press International: Hackers strike at University of Texas:
“Authorities Thursday sought computer hackers who stole the names and Social Security numbers of 59,000 current and former students, faculty and staff last week at the University of Texas at Austin.

UT Austin: Data Theft and Identity Protection:
“The malfunction was assessed to be the result of a deliberate attack from the Internet. Subsequent analysis revealed that a security weakness in an administrative data reporting system was exploited by writing a program to input millions of Social Security numbers. Those SSNs that matched selected individuals in a UT database were captured, together with e-mail address, title, department name, department address, department phone number, and names/dates of employee training programs attended. It is important to note that no student grade or academic records, or personal health or insurance information was disclosed.

Computer logs indicate the information was obtained by computers in Austin and Houston over a five-day period that began last Wednesday, according to UT officials. They don’t know yet if the identification information was used for any illegal purposes… Approximately 55,200 individuals had some of the above data exposed. This group includes current and former students, current and former faculty and staff, and job applicants.”

University of Florida buys mainframe for grid computing platform

ZDNet |UK| – News – Story – IBM sells mainframe for grid research:
“The university has created software that lets actual grids be carved up into private ones for individual users or specific applications. The researchers are using the z800 with z/VM and Linux and the cluster of Intel servers running VMware’s virtualisation software for Linux. In addition to developing grid virtualisation, the systems will be used for nanotechnology and computer science research.

The National Science Foundation funded the purchase of the z800, which was sold by Cornerstone Systems. The University of Florida also bought an Enterprise Storage Server “Shark” system with 3.36 terabytes of capacity.”

UR loses big patent decision re COX-2 enzyme

UR loses big patent decision:

In his opinion
[PDF], Larimer wrote: “An inventor or patentee is entitled to a patent to protect his work but only if he produces or has possession of something truly new and novel.”

“The invention he claims must be sufficiently concrete so that it can be described for the world to appreciate the specific nature of the work that sets it apart from what was before. The inventor must be able to describe the item to be patented with such clarity that the reader is assured that the inventor actually has possession and knowledge of the unique composition that makes it worthy of patent protection. The patent at issue here does not do that.

“What the reader learns from this patent is a wish or plan or first step for obtaining a desired result. What he appreciates is that the patentee had a goal for achieving a certain end result. The reader can certainly appreciate the goal but establishing goals does not a patent make. The reader also learns that the patentee had not proceeded to do what was necessary to accomplish the desired end. In my view, such an invention is not really one at all.”

Spammers hiding behind students (at Tufts)

Spammers hiding behind students
“University networks already stressed by file-sharing programs, viruses and hackers now face a new threat: students who sublet their network access to spammers for as little as $20 per month.”

Got paper? Beth Israel Deaconess copes with a massive computer crash

Death to Bureaucracy!

UniversityBusiness:

Death to Bureaucracy!

When Dr. Edward Hundert took on the presidency of Case Western Reserve this summer, he laid out a multipoint vision for the university; one that would elevate the institution to its place as “the most powerful learning environment in the world.” The cornerstone of his mission? To “annihilate all unnecessary bureaucracy.” (Alas, good men and women before him have espoused the dream.) Yes, it’s all about streamlining technology and business processes, but translated, says the new president, that means: delegation, empowerment, and action.

“How many layers of signatures must you have?” Hundert asks, delivering ideas in a salvo that seems appropriate for the 45-year-old first-time president, reputed to move at the speed of light. “Just getting a position posted was taking an incredible amount of time. Does our provost have to sign off on every adjunct dean he appoints?” He could delegate that duty, says Hundert, and “we could simultaneously delegate the sign-off function further down the line,” he adds, describing any number of areas this domino-effect delegation of power could revise. It’s all about streamlining “huge layers” of business processes with delegation, Hundert explains—processes that typically cut across all areas of a large academic institution.

But delegation is only one step toward the annihilation of gratuitous bureaucracy, he says. He moves on to describe a new empowerment that must pervade CWRU, in order to free up administration and faculty to concentrate on the “aggressive” leaps in curriculum integration, research, and business development that will propel the institution toward its new position.

The empowerment begins with the determination to see the academic and business sides of the university work in tandem, to slice through the bureaucracy issues quickly. Contrary to the historical church-and-state separation of power prevalent in many universities, “My senior management team reflects the philosophy that you shouldn’t separate the academic from the business side of a university,” Hundert tells me. From his president’s cabinet on down, university leaders from both worlds meet in teams, to discuss issues and to put plans into action.

“They must first decide which protocols work, and which don’t,” says Hundert. “We have to kill bureaucracy, but we can’t kill it randomly. If some steps are in place to recruit more minorities, we don’t want to lose those. Yet, if steps are in place just because some top person has always had the power to sign, why do we have to keep it that way?” The teams are looking at everything, says Hundert, right down to purchasing capability. (“The sign-off threshold on bids was $2,500; we raised it to $10,000 immediately. How else can you get anything done?”)

But to empower team members to think and work across academic and business disciplines, it’s not enough to simply combine academic and business leaders around a table. So the new president has merged the academic and business focuses of key individuals, and changed titles along the way. The Senior VP of Finance has become the Executive VP and COO (“Senior VP of Finance conveys that that person doesn’t think about academic things,” Hundert explains.); the Provost has become the Provost and University VP (“That conveys that he is vice president of all facets of the university.”). He’s also added the new role of VP of Corporation—a now not uncommon full-time position that interfaces with the university president and the Board. (The Board, by no coincidence, is now involved in what Hundert terms “massive self-study and benchmarking,” to eliminate and streamline committees, and make itself more efficient).

Of course, technology will play a major role in Hundert’s war on bureaucracy, and the president plans to implement it everywhere he can, and as quickly as possible, to free up administrators and faculty members, and to enable new models of efficiency and achieve new levels of satisfaction. Hundert points to the changes in Student Affairs that he helped to institute at the University of Rochester, where he has served as dean for the past two years.

“If a student wanted to take a year to do integrated study, he had to go from office to office, peddling his story at the front door. Getting through to a key individual was so difficult. So we implemented a one-stop, integrated student center where the people at the central desk were cross-trained to solve problems at Step One. Half the time, it turned out that a student only needed a simple form.” Almost immediately, says Hundert, the student satisfaction level skyrocketed. “And the people in the offices were so energized, they decided to stay open to offer evening help as well,” he adds. At Case Western, that kind of integration will soon criss-cross courses, schools, and institutions, says Hundert, creating a model for the kind of integrated study that will be unique to CWRU—”No deans negotiating shared tuition agreements,” he foretells. “Faculty will be excited to take positions here as opposed to anywhere else, because of the innovation. But it’s all dependent on streamlining bureaucracy.”

We’ll be watching.

Scientists Plan to Shake Hands Via Internet

Scientists Plan to Shake Hands Via Internet:

Pushing on the pen sends data representing forces through the Internet that can be interpreted by a phantom and therefore felt on the other end,” said Mel Slater, Professor of Computer Science at University College London (UCL)…

UCL will conduct the experiment on Tuesday with colleagues from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

File Serving

File Serving:

It is convenient for students and faculty to have access to their files
no matter what computer they’re using, so many universities provide
some sort of network storage. Requirements for a network storage
system include:

  • Scalability. It must be able to handle use by all members
    of the university. (e.g. at MIT, it must be able to handle 15000 users.)

  • Reliability and security
    (it has to withstand use by a large number of highly intelligent,
    curious computer science students with lots of time on their hands!)

  • Compatibility with Windows, Linux, and Macintosh
  • Low Cost. It is likely that only a free software solution will
    be inexpensive enough to be used on every computer on campus.

  • Support. It must already be deployed at many universities,
    and books and other training materials must be readily available.

The building block services for a network storage system include:

  • File Serving
  • Authentication
  • Time Synchronization
  • User Directory
  • Domain Name Service

Oddly enough, it seems there is currently only one choice for the File
Serving service that meets all the above requirements: AFS (in the form
of OpenAFS).
That dictates several other choices:
AFS requires Kerberos as its user authentication service,
and Kerberos requires NTP as its time synchronization service.
Both probably require DNS as their hostname lookup service.

Lots of useful links re AFS, Kerberos, integration with clients, help desk pages at various universities, Active Directory, evaluations/critiques of alternatives, and other related topics.

Linux cluster [at University of Buffalo] will help research treatment of cancer, AIDS


Linux cluster [at University of Buffalo] will help research treatment of cancer, AIDS

The cluster at the Buffalo Center of Excellence in Bioinformatics at SUNY Buffalo went online in mid-August and is often running at full capacity even though the set-up team is still doing some minor tweaking, says Jeffrey Skolnick, the soon-to-be director of the bioinformatics center.

Most of the computers in the cluster are 1.26 GHz Dell PowerEdge servers, with a few higher-speed Xeons thrown in. Subcontractor Sistina Software is providing cluster file system technology to manage the data traffic among the nodes.

Skolnick can rattle off all kinds of interesting statistics about the cluster. It will enable researchers to predict protein structure and run large-scale computer simulations, and work that would’ve taken 1,000 years on on processor will be done in three to six months on the cluster. “We’re not just trying to collect computers, which is a nice little hobby,” he says. “It enables us to do science we couldn’t do elsewhere.”

And managing these 2,000 machines will be two sysadmins. That’s right, two of them. That’s the beauty of running a cluster instead of a bunch of individual machines, of course, and Linux will help keep the maintenance costs down, Skolnick says. “I’ve got to get the most bang for my research dollar,” he adds.

Princeton demotes officer for hacking