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reveazure OP t1_izq26ni wrote

Previously there was an announcement that most of the MIT buildings including the infinite corridor would be permanently closed to the general public as an extension of covid policies. It looks like public feedback has done its job and they decided to return to the pre-covid open policy.

Sometimes things work out.

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SpindriftRascal t1_izqd8wd wrote

That seems like a sound, well-reasoned decision likely to benefit the university and the community.

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ChildOfHeist t1_izqjnwo wrote

This is a real victory. Places like MIT that have nonprofit status and don’t pay local property taxes have a duty to be reasonably open to the public (except dorms and the nuclear reactor and so forth).

Emergency covid restrictions shouldn’t become a permanent power grab by institutions to limit access to public spaces.

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riski_click t1_izqk4es wrote

My favorite part of this resolution is that the "community" feedback all came from within the MIT community. It wasn't that the people of Cambridge were complaining they weren't allowed anymore, it was the people of MIT that were complaining that the public were no longer allowed in the infinite corridor. I was glad to see those barriers inside 77 Mass suddenly disappear!

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I_love_Bunda t1_izqt5zf wrote

Genuinely curious - why would the public want access to any of these things? I get maybe the library, but any of the other buildings? Why? I worked in the area for years, and would constantly walk by these buildings, going inside any of them never crossed my mind.

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giritrobbins t1_izqu42e wrote

Crossing from Cambridge to the river without going through a building is challenging or requires a detour. You're visiting a friend, or having a meeting with someone perhaps. You want to sit and work somewhere are a few.

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psmgpme t1_izqwawe wrote

MIT is obviously a major meeting place for academics who work at other institutions in the area. I have to go to MIT all the time and it's a lot easier to just be able to walk in rather than have to figure out how I'm going to get to where I need to go.

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ItsOkItOnlyHurts t1_izqxn3i wrote

When I was working in the area last summer, I would use the MIT gym (no initiation fee so summer pass was best rate I could find) and on really hot days I wanted to use the corridor to get to the gym…

Finding a keycarded lock on all the doors felt rude af. I went there for events in high school and it was harder to find a locked exterior door than a locked one back then

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Apprehensive-Hat-494 t1_izrg2mp wrote

I find it funny that a university would make such a show of using "the risks COVID-19 poses to our campus community" to justify or contextualize decisions after ending social restrictions in campus life. Like don't they know that college students regularly engage in activities where they are close to other students? Yes, it's not some SEC school, but still. Someone from Cambridge sitting at an MIT library table is much less likely to transmit COVID or any illness than people dancing at a rager.

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I'd also like to hear more about the "security enhancements." Is there an ongoing or new threat to MIT students from a security perspective that wasn't there before COVID or in the past generally? Massachusetts in general and Cambridge in particular don't have a ton of crime, and the public access hours will probably be sufficient security, no?

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Toffeechu t1_izrk6ja wrote

How do you like dem apples.

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liltingly t1_izryu1o wrote

There’s actually an few animal labs that you have to sign documents to protect their secrecy. Courses like 6.022 end with a vivisection on a live rabbit (killing it at the end) and you basically have to walk a maze to get there and never divulge where it is. There were rats and monkeys and pheasants in that place too.

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liltingly t1_izrzagw wrote

Flip side is the Korean tour busses would land hundreds of tourists on campus multiple times a day and clog up the infinite for students. “Dream Tours” was the biggest culprit. Also a girl got sexually assaulted in the tunnels and another in a classroom during my time as a student — both non students assaulted by non students.

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liltingly t1_izrzj8i wrote

If you’re an alumnus/a go to the MIT police office in the student center to get your alumni card. You regain all accesses including after hours.

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Opposite_Match5303 t1_izs8u85 wrote

It's not classified stuff, but eg building 31 needed to be locked to the public so labs could get funding from the military None of the grad students working on those projects have security clearances or anything, it just helps them get grants

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AKiss20 t1_izsad4h wrote

I worked in 31 for 10 years starting in 2010. It didn’t used to be locked prior to the renovation. Only certain rooms need to be locked and that’s not because of military issues specifically. They locked the building because before the renovation all grad students were in lockable offices. Now it’s all open floor plan and they had issues with some thefts.

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jgonagle t1_izsh69u wrote

Yeah, there was a massive grassroots campaign among alumni to write in about how the new policy proposal would destroy the school's unique culture. I can't speak much to the effect of the general public's input.

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giritrobbins t1_izskjif wrote

As a Northeastern student theft was common, but the blotter always, "student left laptop unsecured in the library for thirty minutes to go get lunch." Like yeah it's going to get stolen, it's just sitting there.

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AKiss20 t1_izsnwke wrote

There’s definitely some security around storing proprietary information, but that’s not military specific. In fact it’s sorta the opposite. Afaik the military doesn’t have a way to make information “proprietary” outside of classification (but I’m not an expert, I never worked on any military sponsored research). Private companies that sponsor research, however, almost always have proprietary information agreements and NDAs with academia as research often involves sharing data that is proprietary.

Lincoln Labs and Draper were created specifically to deal with classified research. That way MIT can claim it has an open research policy but still get that sweet DOD money lol.

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kayhart3 t1_izsp147 wrote

Love that. I went to Harvard with family thinking we could get into at least one building and was SO disappointed.

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BUZZUKKA t1_izsslap wrote

There is no “military research” on the MIT campus. All of the military research is just fundamental research with military advisors trying to find military uses. They also do not have any TS/SCI secured buildings for TS research.

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XHIBAD t1_izsy1f4 wrote

True story: I had never seen a black squirrel before I moved to Massachusetts. Walking through MIT’s campus I saw several of them and thought they were genetically engineered squirrels that had escaped the lab

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My-Left-Plate t1_izsy3o6 wrote

This person is likely spreading false information. There is no 6.022 class at MIT, and even if there were course 6 is computer science.

I have several friends and a wife who graduated MIT with biology or neuro degrees and none of them have heard of anything g like this.

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hamakabi t1_izsz6nj wrote

The Infinite Corridor is a long hall that runs through the center of campus and crosses several buildings. This is where the MIT community posts all of their event fliers and information boards, and the walls are covered in glass cases showing off research and other projects.

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My-Left-Plate t1_izsz8rz wrote

Non-profits are all ‘private entities’. That’s how it works. Non-profits are entirely able to make money and keep money. There is nothing anywhere that says or implies that non-profits can’t make as much money as they want.

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beeinabearcostume t1_izt0dm6 wrote

People were holding the doors open for others for a while now anyways. The visitor access system didn’t even mandate vaccines, especially to guest speakers in the area where I work, and half the time was so glitchy that we had to resort to propping doors open after issuing visitor access through the TIM Ticket app. Contact tracing has all but stopped, and so has regular testing and being able to work remotely when you’re not feeling 100%, so people probably come in to work on campus with Covid regularly. For the past semester all restricting access really did was inconvenience caterers and make event planning a logistical nightmare.

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UniWheel t1_iztjep7 wrote

> it was the people of MIT that were complaining tha.t the public were no longer allowed in the infinite corridor

Or that the access controls were annoying.

Plus the general feeling of being tracked.

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TheOriginalTerra t1_iztn668 wrote

It's not really the pre-COVID open policy, though. The Main Group and Kendall Square buildings are open during the day on weekdays, and everything that was closed before is still closed on weekends. After they proposed keeping the campus closed, there was a lot of backlash, so then sent a survey to the community asking, basically, "Do you want an open campus, or do you want a safe campus?" And still about two-thirds of respondents wanted an open campus. I guess the new schedule was the administration's idea of a compromise.

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Abismos t1_iztxntg wrote

As a Harvard student I'm glad to see this. A few weeks ago I went to a seminar at MIT. Got there 5 minutes early to see that all the doors were keycard locked and I was supposed to walk ~20 mins to an office on the other side of campus to get a guest pass.

I just hung around until I could walk in with someone, but I'm glad to see that these buildings will be opening up again, not only for the general public but also for other academics in the area. The seminar was really cool too so I'm glad I made it in.

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My-Left-Plate t1_izulb74 wrote

They are by definition and the law a non-profit. Again if you don’t like the law, run for office and change the law.

These universities act very differently from a public corporation and also very differently than a private for-profit corporation. The decision makers have very different motives which lead to very different outcomes.

These universities educate our brightest, but mainly they are huge economic wealth creators. If you made a country out of the companies that have been created and spun off of MIT it would be the 10th wealthiest country in the world. These are the companies that employ America. This public/private partnership is one of the bedrocks of America and it is something to be excited about, not complain about.

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My-Left-Plate t1_izur7s8 wrote

Having companies that generate wealth is not the reason we have an increasing wealth gap. We had MIT and these companies being generated in 1955 too. But what we had then was a 95% top marginal tax rate.

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SusanSarandonsTits t1_izuy53a wrote

Wow in the middle of a freaking pandemic? Yikes, not a good like MIT

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liltingly t1_izwqg5g wrote

Quantitative physiology 6.02X takes a systems approach to biological processes. Course VI is EECS, so 6.022 uses the lumped circuit abstraction to understand blood pressure regulation and respiration amongst other things. Course VI is not just computer science (VI-III) which people are assuming. And I think now there’s a bajillion sub fields in VI, not just I, II, and III.

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