Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't have a problem with this. They broke rules in order to achieve a goal. Goal achieved. They should expect to be disciplined. We all make those calculations.
Agreed. Harvard put them in this situation by not immediately suspending Summers. After reading his illiterate juvenile sounding emails, I do not understand how he was allowed to teach.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Larry Summers should get his due.
And the students should be reprimanded. Harvard can't just ignore it if students are going around recording classes without permission and posting excerpts. They have to address that. And they have to deal with the bigger crimes of Summers.
Is this sarcasm or are you some wackjob Zionist? Students have been recording college lectures for literally decades.
No they have not. Nor have they been posting videos of lectures on the internet with their classmates’ faces clearly visible without their consent.
The students are not being investigated because Harvard is trying to protect Summers. They’re trying to ensure that Harvard students don’t have to fear appearing in a viral video because someone is taping them in class without their consent.
lol. We were sharing mini cassette recorded lectures in study groups in the 90s! My kids share high-def audio/video iPhone recorded lectures with college study buddies — if the professors themselves don’t upload the recordings online.
hey grandpa, we're not talking about your high tech sony walkman days. we're talking about recordings being shared online beyond the student community, that has video of student faces without the consent of students.
if you don't know about a little something called our legal framework--Massachusetts is an all party consent state. you have to get the permission of all involved to record people (by video, by phone, whatever).
There is no expectation of such privacy in public on any campus in 2025. Every kid constantly has their phone out recording, taking pictures, on FaceTime, and social media. Is Harvard going to expel every student who's ever posted a party clip on social media without first getting EVERY peer in the background to sign off on it? You sound insane.Anonymous wrote:I don't have a problem with this. They broke rules in order to achieve a goal. Goal achieved. They should expect to be disciplined. We all make those calculations.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Larry Summers should get his due.
And the students should be reprimanded. Harvard can't just ignore it if students are going around recording classes without permission and posting excerpts. They have to address that. And they have to deal with the bigger crimes of Summers.
Is this sarcasm or are you some wackjob Zionist? Students have been recording college lectures for literally decades.
No they have not. Nor have they been posting videos of lectures on the internet with their classmates’ faces clearly visible without their consent.
The students are not being investigated because Harvard is trying to protect Summers. They’re trying to ensure that Harvard students don’t have to fear appearing in a viral video because someone is taping them in class without their consent.
lol. We were sharing mini cassette recorded lectures in study groups in the 90s! My kids share high-def audio/video iPhone recorded lectures with college study buddies — if the professors themselves don’t upload the recordings online.
hey grandpa, we're not talking about your high tech sony walkman days. we're talking about recordings being shared online beyond the student community, that has video of student faces without the consent of students.
if you don't know about a little something called our legal framework--Massachusetts is an all party consent state. you have to get the permission of all involved to record people (by video, by phone, whatever).
Hey baby, only secret recordings are illegal.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Larry Summers should get his due.
And the students should be reprimanded. Harvard can't just ignore it if students are going around recording classes without permission and posting excerpts. They have to address that. And they have to deal with the bigger crimes of Summers.
Is this sarcasm or are you some wackjob Zionist? Students have been recording college lectures for literally decades.
No they have not. Nor have they been posting videos of lectures on the internet with their classmates’ faces clearly visible without their consent.
The students are not being investigated because Harvard is trying to protect Summers. They’re trying to ensure that Harvard students don’t have to fear appearing in a viral video because someone is taping them in class without their consent.
lol. We were sharing mini cassette recorded lectures in study groups in the 90s! My kids share high-def audio/video iPhone recorded lectures with college study buddies — if the professors themselves don’t upload the recordings online.
hey grandpa, we're not talking about your high tech sony walkman days. we're talking about recordings being shared online beyond the student community, that has video of student faces without the consent of students.
if you don't know about a little something called our legal framework--Massachusetts is an all party consent state. you have to get the permission of all involved to record people (by video, by phone, whatever).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Larry Summers should get his due.
And the students should be reprimanded. Harvard can't just ignore it if students are going around recording classes without permission and posting excerpts. They have to address that. And they have to deal with the bigger crimes of Summers.
Is this sarcasm or are you some wackjob Zionist? Students have been recording college lectures for literally decades.
No they have not. Nor have they been posting videos of lectures on the internet with their classmates’ faces clearly visible without their consent.
The students are not being investigated because Harvard is trying to protect Summers. They’re trying to ensure that Harvard students don’t have to fear appearing in a viral video because someone is taping them in class without their consent.
lol. We were sharing mini cassette recorded lectures in study groups in the 90s! My kids share high-def audio/video iPhone recorded lectures with college study buddies — if the professors themselves don’t upload the recordings online.
hey grandpa, we're not talking about your high tech sony walkman days. we're talking about recordings being shared online beyond the student community, that has video of student faces without the consent of students.
if you don't know about a little something called our legal framework--Massachusetts is an all party consent state. you have to get the permission of all involved to record people (by video, by phone, whatever).
Anonymous wrote:Larry Summers should get his due.
And the students should be reprimanded. Harvard can't just ignore it if students are going around recording classes without permission and posting excerpts. They have to address that. And they have to deal with the bigger crimes of Summers.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Larry Summers should get his due.
And the students should be reprimanded. Harvard can't just ignore it if students are going around recording classes without permission and posting excerpts. They have to address that. And they have to deal with the bigger crimes of Summers.
Is this sarcasm or are you some wackjob Zionist? Students have been recording college lectures for literally decades.
No they have not. Nor have they been posting videos of lectures on the internet with their classmates’ faces clearly visible without their consent.
The students are not being investigated because Harvard is trying to protect Summers. They’re trying to ensure that Harvard students don’t have to fear appearing in a viral video because someone is taping them in class without their consent.
lol. We were sharing mini cassette recorded lectures in study groups in the 90s! My kids share high-def audio/video iPhone recorded lectures with college study buddies — if the professors themselves don’t upload the recordings online.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't have a problem with this. They broke rules in order to achieve a goal. Goal achieved. They should expect to be disciplined. We all make those calculations.
I don't know. I believe whistle blowers should have some protection. In fact, Harvard may even be acting illegally or against their own policies in this regard.
Anonymous wrote:I don't have a problem with this. They broke rules in order to achieve a goal. Goal achieved. They should expect to be disciplined. We all make those calculations.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Larry Summers should get his due.
And the students should be reprimanded. Harvard can't just ignore it if students are going around recording classes without permission and posting excerpts. They have to address that. And they have to deal with the bigger crimes of Summers.
Is this sarcasm or are you some wackjob Zionist? Students have been recording college lectures for literally decades.
No they have not. Nor have they been posting videos of lectures on the internet with their classmates’ faces clearly visible without their consent.
The students are not being investigated because Harvard is trying to protect Summers. They’re trying to ensure that Harvard students don’t have to fear appearing in a viral video because someone is taping them in class without their consent.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They should be focused on getting their sh*t together as a university and not punishing students for revealing the truth
Students can tell the truth without violating the privacy of their fellow students. The students who posted broke a lot of rules about taping people without their knowledge/consent and posting those videos on the internet, again without the consent of the students in those videos who were in the summers class and are now online for all to see.