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3 yr. ago

  • Your example has occurred in dozens of companies, but people just don't care.

  • The news outlets I saw reporting on this were mostly calling out that violence was started by agitators rather than counter-protestors

  • Nah, you have it backwards. The protestors broke into a building, so police was sent to get them out. It would be the same outcome as if you decided to break into a building and lock yourself in.

  • You got a source on that?

  • Bad timing on your end. The Colombia protestors just raided one of the halls and barricaded themselves in.

    Tents on a lawn is one thing, even if they did nothing to silence the calls for hate among their ranks. Breaking (in the literal sense) into a building and causing damage is a whole level of escalation from the protestors. At what point do they shift into a violent riot?

  • W safety of some students cannot be comprised by granting other students their freedom.

  • That drives up maintenance significantly. You suddenly need your technicians driving around everywhere servicing small units rather than at one central location making sure the main unit is online.

  • Wrong, try again.

  • I'm talking about the deadline today. The university already started handing out suspensions for those still there, but haven't cleared them out yet.

  • When the cops show up at your home are they your own funded private security? The university called them in due to trespassing protestors.

  • Go read up about what the first amendment actually is and how it applies to private entities (hint: it doesn't).

  • Their camp is still there on campus past the deadline. They clearly haven't fully faced the consequences of it yet.

  • Nah, I expect people are dumb enough to think the first amendment protects them from private institutions and consequences. I've seen enough people over the years that have proven me right and were then surprised by the consequences of their own actions.

  • Oh I've got nothing against how the librarians handled it. I'm more concerned that their IT staff failed to properly shield the library from liabilities like OP.

  • I can't wait for the surprise Pikachu on their faces when the university takes action. If they think actions should have consequences for others, why shouldn't it apply to them as well?

  • Yeah, having services blocked on Wi-Fi and not ethernet just tells me that their IT staff didn't properly configure the network in public areas properly. That ethernet port should have been disabled, physically locked, or properly configured to use the public network like the Wi-Fi does.

  • I plugged into ethernet (as wifi w/captive portal does not work for me). I think clearnet worked but I have no interest in that. Egress Tor traffic was blocked and so was VPN. I’m not interested in editing all my scripts and configs to use clearnet, so the library’s internet is useless to me (unless I bother to try a tor bridge).

    Yeah... Trying to bypass their security by using ethernet instead of Wi-Fi to use your own stuff that's being blocked is tantamount to abusing the library's services. Someone should let the IT staff know so they can properly block those services on ethernet as well.

  • Lots of techniques to try and demonize Israel being used here. Of course no sources provided and they're all basically opinions started from a negative bias against Israel and enforced with every little tidbit of info they can get.

  • I doesn't operate in Europe, so they don't care to be GDPR compliant. They do operate in California, so they need to support those laws. It's still not worth it to look at changing their policy towards GDPR even if they're complaint.