The Daily Free Press
Year xliv. Volume lxxxvi. Issue I
LEGIS-LATER
Mass. Rep. Conroy joins race for state treasurer, page 3.
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Wednesday, January 15, 2014 The Independent Student Newspaper at Boston University
SHAPE UP
BU athletic clubs promote healthy living, page 5.
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www.dailyfreepress.com
SEE YA LATER
Forward Sam Kurker leaves BU men’s hockey team, page 8.
WEATHER
Today: Sunny, high 50. Tonight: Cloudy, low 33. Tomorrow: 43/32.
Data Courtesy of weather.com
Independent tech firm to review healthcare site Hackers use emails to gain passwords, access to accounts By Kelsey Newell Daily Free Press Staff
Massachusetts officials are bringing MITRE, an independent technology firm, to review the new state health insurance website and fix its numerous problems before the Friday deadline. Jason Lefferts, spokesman for Massachusetts Health Connector, said Massachusetts is a national leader in health care access and affordability, and the goal of the connector is to remain that way. “We are building an entirely new system in Massachusetts from what we had before that only reflects the beneficial changes in the Affordable Care Act, but also makes it easier for consumers to apply for coverage, find the best program that suits their needs, and find the best plan for themselves and their families,” he said. MITRE is a not-for-profit corporation that operates research and development centers, assisting the U.S. Government in research, analysis, development and system integration. One of these centers is the CMS Alliance to Modernize Healthcare. “CMS has asked us to do a systems development analysis of the Massachusetts Health Connector website and draft recommendations to address the issues by Jan. 17,” said Lauren Libitz, MITRE community relations manager. This system analysis will be extensive in an effort to fix all the current problems
By Taryn Ottaunick Daily Free Press Staff
which are needed and many which are not needed,” she said. “So we’re aiming for a balance we are trying to strike between facilitating research and preventing human subjects harms.” Fiske said she hopes lawmakers will take the report’s suggestions into consideration when making changes to the Common Rule. “What we are hoping is that the thoughtfulness and carefulness and evidence we draw on will influence the government agencies that are revising the Common Rule to make it more responsive to the social and behavioral sciences and both facilitate research and protect people better,” Fiske said.
The online entity that accessed the payroll accounts of some Boston University employees earlier in January made another attempt to scam some members of the BU community, officials said. The hackers sent out a “phishing” email to BU faculty members posing as Internet security officials in order to solicit the usernames and passwords of those employees, said BU Information & Technology Services Executive Director of Information Security Quinn Shamblin. “The [phishing email] message is designed to take advantage of legitimate security efforts,” Shamblin said. “We saw some of those messages coming in over the weekend with the bad guys trying again.” BU affiliates received an email from the IT Help Center Sunday notifying the university community about the suspicious emails. Earlier in January, hackers changed bank account information for 10 university employees, preventing the employees from accessing their paychecks, said Boston University Police Department Detective Peter DiDomenica. “It started out with one suspicious incident of someone’s payroll check going into another account,” DiDomenica said. “And then through an audit of all the payroll records here, it was determined that there was a series of these fraudulent diversions of payroll checks based on a theory of someone going into each individual’s payroll account and changing the designated account where the money should go.” The method used by the hackers, known as “phishing,” involves a hacker posing as a legitimate entity in order to lure confidential information from a user, said BU professor of computer science Ran Canetti. “Phishing is a way to fool somebody into interacting with some entity over the web that they trust, usually by way of making a screen that appears to be coming from a legitimate source or a source that is known
Research, see page 2
Phishing, see page 2
ALEXANDRA WIMLEY/DAILY FREE PRESS STAFF
An independent technology firm, MITRE, will review the state’s health insurance website, Massachusetts Health Connector, after technical issues prevented customers from filling out the online applications necessary in order to keep their coverage.
with the website. Massachusetts worked with CGI, a business and technology firm, to develop this new website. Many of the faults with the website are attributed to them, she said. The website has caused trouble for subsidized applicants who need to select a plan, healthcare carriers who need to trans-
fer their enrollment information and anyone who is searching for dental or smallbusiness coverage. Thousands of people are in temporary MassHealth coverage due to the system problems. Despite these setbacks, officials of Mas-
Healthcare, see page 2
Report suggests changes to rules for human subject research By Olivia Deng Daily Free Press Staff
The National Research Council released a report on Thursday outlining a set of revisions to regulations in place regarding the use of human subjects for scientific research at institutions such as Boston University. The report is a response to a 2011 Department of Health and Human Services proposal that sought to revise the Common Rule, or the regulations under which human subjects can be used for research, by excusing a research category that would lessen the Institutional Review Board Process for low-risk research. Michael Lyons, professor of psychology at Boston University, said the revisions will increase efficiency by loosening regu-
lations while protecting human subjects. “They [the revisions] streamline the process and remove a number of unreasonable requirements,” Lyons said. “They remove sources of ambiguity about the process, so I think this will facilitate researchers being able to do their research efficiently without reducing at all the protection of subjects.” The report also suggests that some types of research should be excused or subject to less scrutiny in the review process. Human subjects research excludes research that is dependent on publicly available and observable information and research that collects or relies on personally identifiable information, said Susan Fiske, chair of the NRC committee that drafted the report. “There are a lot of regulations, many
COM student skates at national level By Taryn Ottaunick Daily Free Press Staff
PHOTO COURTESY OF JIMMY MORGAN
Jimmy Morgan, a College of Communication senior, performed with his figure skating partner Alex Shaughnessy at the U.S. Figure Skating Championships Saturday.
Boston University student Jimmy Morgan competed in the 2014 U.S. Figure Skating Championships senior division at Boston’s TD Garden Saturday. Morgan, a College of Communication senior, competed in the pairs division with his partner Alex Shaughnessy. The championship, known as Nationals to many competitors, is a preliminary competition where the top scorers advance to represent the United States in the 2014 Winter Olympics in Sochi, Russia. “This is our fourth nationals, so we kind of knew what to expect with all the big lights and the judges, but this one was extra special because we were at home and people could come see us and all our families were there,” Morgan said. “I guess that kind of added to the pressure a little bit, but we just gave it the best we could. It was a lot of fun.” Although the pair did not place, getting to the senior divisions of Nationals and making an impression was their main goal,
Shaughnessy, a 21-year-old student studying business management at Northeastern University, said. “Our goal was to just show up and show them what we got,” Shaughnessy said. “We wanted to make a big splash this year. Obviously, our first year we were not expecting a medal. We knew that going into this. We wanted to just be noticed and ... tell the world that we’re ready to be a senior pair team.” Morgan has been skating since he was four years old, beginning as a hockey player and eventually moving into figure skating. Although Morgan originally intended to be a singles skater, he entered into a partnership after his coach, Bobby Martin, noticed his height. “He came to me as a student on his own, and I immediately saw that he was going to be a large, strapping young man and steered him into the direction of pairskating pretty early on,” Martin said. In addition to being a supportive partner on the ice, Morgan is also a good
Figure Skating, see page 2