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It would be difficult for an unknown individual or unknown/untrusted organisation. It's less difficult for a respected university willing to sacrifice its reputation.
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The patches for the study were submitted from Gmail addresses. It wasn't tied to the university and didn't even use university email addresses. I don't know why people keep repeating this misinformation, including kernel developers.
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That's not one of the emails involved in the study. It was an inaccurate claim. I suggest not spreading misinformation and libel. Kernel maintainers being dishonest and misrepresenting good faith patches from students as part of a past study makes the project look bad.
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Again, the patches involved in that study were submitted from Gmail addresses. The study is a past event. You're linking a recent patch from a student not involved in it. It's misinformation and is dishonest. It is making Linux look increasingly bad in this situation, not better.
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Kernel maintainers being consistently dishonest taints the project. Misrepresenting what happened and making unjustified accusations against good faith contributions from students isn't a good look. Slandering students there for something they didn't do really doesn't look good.
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Criticizing the study for unethical human experimentation makes sense. Attacking these students and spreading misinformation in a misguided attempt to defend the kernel's reputation is worse than what the study actually did. Kernel maintainers did most of the harm themselves...
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