The Silhouette - March 13, 2014

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The

Silhouette McMASTER UNIVERSITY’S STUDENT NEWSPAPER

Thursday, March 13, 2014 VOL. 84 NO. 25 TECHNOLOGY

DeGroote survey hacked

GROUND TO A HALT Snow Day At McMaster

School of business satisfaction survey plagued by auto-vote script – offender removed from position

Campus was closed for a second time this term on Wednesday, March 12 due to inclement weather conditions. Even the Five Days for the Homeless fundraisers opted to pack in their megaphones and put their donation drive on hold.

Rachel Faber Assistant News Editor McMaster students are no stranger to surveys, with feedback requests and class evaluations constantly filling our email inboxes. The DeGroote Experience Survey was launched on the MSU website on Jan. 30 of this year for the purpose of observing student satisfaction with the DeGroote School of Business, and it has garnered some unwanted attention. A few days after the survey’s release, it became clear to administrators of the MSU website that the survey had been hacked and a script set up to answer questions automatically. The survey received 18,000 answers within the first three days, indicating malicious activity. Answers concerning the studentrun DeGroote Commerce Society all appeared to have unusually high scores. The survey questions all showed an even distribution of answers from one to five. However, answers regarding the DCS all had scores of four or five. The Commerce Caucus of the SRA originally launched the survey anonymously, though due to this issue it was decided that students should be required to sign in with their McMaster ID. Despite these efforts, on February 12 the survey again found 1,400 unusual responses in favour of the DCS that were the result of another malicious script. The survey hack was traced back to McMaster and to an email and a specific person within the DCS. “I felt that it was disappointing to see student leaders trying to thwart the issues of other students,” said Jeffrey Doucet, MSU Vice President of Finance. On Feb. 17 the DCS issued a public apology on their website stating that a member of their organization was in fact responsible and was acting alone without their knowledge. “This individual has agreed to cease all malicious activities against the MSU website and will abstain from any negative action towards the survey or the MSU website,” stated the post. The President and CEO of the DCS, Conrad Thompson commented last week that “the matter is under investigation and the individual has been removed from their position.” Scott Mallon, leader of the Commerce Caucus noted on the SRA website that one of the reasons the survey was created in the first place was because the caucus felt that the DCS was not governing themselves in “an open and transparent democratic fashion.” Mallon also expressed his disappointment and hope for better communication between the DCS and DeGroote School of Business in the future. Mallon stated that the SRA thought it was best not to point out or shame the person responsible, as they took the opportunity to resign from their position after being found accountable for disrupting the survey. @rachfaber

DeGroote School of Business. C M Y K

rt o shtory s test n ers o c nn wi

ELIZA POPE / ASSISTANT PHOTO EDITOR

Mac students start exercise group Exercise is Medicine McMaster group aims to highlight the health benefits of a regular – but not rough – workout routine Tomi Milos Features Editor When Donna D’Souza and Mark von Allmen attended a conference conducted by the Canadian Society for Exercise Physiology last October, they didn’t even know each others’ names. But the two McMaster students quickly connected through email after they both expressed interest in starting a chapter of Exercise is Medicine on Campus at the university. Von Allmen, a Master’s student in Kinesiology, and D’Souza, a third-year PhD candidate in Medical Sciences, soon welcomed Lindsay Griffith, a second-year medical student at Queens, into the fray. Exercise is Medicine on Campus is a post-secondary offshoot of a global initiative that believes in the virtues of using physical activity and exercise to reduce the risk of chronic disease. The group at McMaster grew out of the conversations that the three students had at the end of October, with their first executive council meeting taking place in February where they welcomed eleven other graduate students. Recent interest from other students has seen them add around 50 members to their general council. Their most immediate goals are to begin promoting a healthy lifestyle amongst the McMaster community, as well as collaborating with McMaster physicians to get exercise as treatment off the ground. D’Souza emphasized how their experience in different backgrounds has been beneficial to their progress, with it helping to convert the theoretical knowledge they have at their disposal to render it fit for practical application. As the end of the school year

Why is Canadian law being sold to Chinese interests? PAGE A9

TOMI MILOS / FEATURES EDITOR

Donna D’Souza, Mark von Allmen and Lindsay Griffith started the McMaster chapter of Exercise is Medicine, a health advocacy group.

Mac star leads the pack on the track and in her class PAGE B7

draws near, von Allmen said they had hopes of completing a prescription pad that they’d like to see used by all health services on campus. “It’d be something that we’d have to help teach medical professionals how to use exercise in a practical manner in their daily clinical activities. We’re designing our own that’s based off the national template that [Exercise is Medicine Canada] gave us. We’d like to see it in as many places as possible, including the hospital and our Student Wellness Centre,” he said. Speaking to the common sentiment among students that they somehow don’t have enough time to exercise, but D’Souza said they might be deterred by a lack of knowledge of where to start. “If they go to the doctor and he says, ‘You have high blood pressure and you’re overweight…you should exercise more’, they’re at a

Food and Restaurant reviews that will get you craving more PAGE B8

loss because that’s very general,” said D’Souza. Von Allmen was also quick to emphasize that Exercise is Medicine does not promote the idea that one should be doing strenuous exercise everyday, something which could intimidate some. “It can sometimes be as simple as getting involved in intramurals. They are a fun, team-building social activity that has an underlying factor of keeping their participants active for a certain amount of time,” he said. The group is currently trying to organize an inter-professional education event through the Program for Inter-professional Practice, Education and Research at McMaster. They hope to draw professionals and students from a wide range of disciplines. @tomimilos


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