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MIT students pull prank on conference

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N8 v2.0

Not the sharpest tool in the shed
Oct 18, 2002
11,003
149
The Cleft of Venus
See the thread titled: A Synthesis of Byzantine Fault Tolerance...

:p

MIT students pull prank on conference
Computer-generated gibberish submitted, accepted
CNN.com | 14 Apr

CAMBRIDGE, Massachusetts (Reuters) -- In a victory for pranksters at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, a bunch of computer-generated gibberish masquerading as an academic paper has been accepted at a scientific conference.

Jeremy Stribling said Thursday that he and two fellow MIT graduate students questioned the standards of some academic conferences, so they wrote a computer program to generate research papers complete with "context-free grammar," charts and diagrams.

The trio submitted two of the randomly assembled papers to the World Multi-Conference on Systemics, Cybernetics and Informatics (WMSCI), scheduled to be held July 10-13 in Orlando, Florida.

To their surprise, one of the papers -- "Rooter: A Methodology for the Typical Unification of Access Points and Redundancy" -- was accepted for presentation.

The prank recalled a 1996 hoax in which New York University physicist Alan Sokal succeeded in getting an entire paper with a mix of truths, falsehoods, non sequiturs and otherwise meaningless mumbo-jumbo published in the quarterly journal Social Text, published by Duke University Press.

Stribling said he and his colleagues only learned about the Social Text affair after submitting their paper.

"Rooter" features such mind-bending gems as: "the model for our heuristic consists of four independent components: simulated annealing, active networks, flexible modalities, and the study of reinforcement learning" and "We implemented our scatter/gather I/O server in Simula-67, augmented with opportunistically pipelined extensions."

Stribling said the trio targeted WMSCI because it is notorious within the field of computer science for sending copious e-mails that solicit admissions to the conference.

The idea of a fake submission was to counter "fake conferences...which exist only to make money," explained Stribling and his cohorts' website, "SCIgen - An Automatic CS Paper Generator."

"Our aim is to maximize amusement, rather than coherence," it said. The website allows users to "Generate a Random Paper" themselves, with fields for inserting "optional author names."

"Contrarily, the lookaside buffer might not be the panacea..."
Nagib Callaos, a conference organizer, said the paper was one of a small number accepted on a "non-reviewed" basis -- meaning that reviewers had not yet given their feedback by the acceptance deadline.

"We thought that it might be unfair to refuse a paper that was not refused by any of its three selected reviewers," Callaos wrote in an e-mail. "The author of a non-reviewed paper has complete responsibility of the content of their paper."

However, Callaos said conference organizers were reviewing their acceptance procedures in light of the hoax.

Asked whether he would disinvite the MIT students, Callos replied, "Bogus papers should not be included in the conference program."

Stribling said conference organizers had not yet formally rescinded their invitation to present the paper.

The students were soliciting cash donations so they could attend the conference and give what Stribling billed as a "completely randomly-generated talk, delivered entirely with a straight face."

They exceeded their goal, with $2,311.09 cents from 165 donors.
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Related Link: Write your own Computer Science Paper Here
 

LordOpie

MOTHER HEN
Oct 17, 2002
21,022
3
Denver
on a serious side of something along these lines, go check out the movie, "The Yes Men".

As for the computer generated paper, I wonder if the conference responded with a computer generated complaint letter :D
 

SkaredShtles

Michael Bolton
Sep 21, 2003
67,818
14,159
In a van.... down by the river
Here's a response from a PhD from another list:

"Not amazing at all. That conference, like several others, accepts
absolutely everything. It serves as a cash cow for the organizers
(registration fees) and as an excuse for foreign travel by third-rate
academics."

:D

-S.S.-
 

DH biker

Turbo Monkey
Dec 12, 2004
1,185
0
North East
The onetime at Night Brought a Cap Car into one of the building and hung it from the ceiling with fake cops and donutes inside it. There is a website with all their pranks but I don't know the URL of it.
 

stinkyboy

Plastic Santa
Jan 6, 2005
15,187
1
¡Phoenix!
DH biker said:
The onetime at Night Brought a Cap Car into one of the building and hung it from the ceiling with fake cops and donutes inside it. There is a website with all their pranks but I don't know the URL of it.
Spell check...
 

Transcend

My Nuts Are Flat
Apr 18, 2002
18,040
3
Towing the party line.
DH biker said:
The onetime at Night Brought a Cap Car into one of the building and hung it from the ceiling with fake cops and donutes inside it. There is a website with all their pranks but I don't know the URL of it.
English, do you speak it?

They are called MIT hacks. This is the site you are looking for.
http://hacks.mit.edu/Hacks/

They routinely turn the great dome into r2d2, the ring from lord of the rings etc.