B-School's Best, Denied.

0312334486.01._SCMZZZZZZZ_.jpgLast month we found out security was breached at ChoicePoint through some creative social-engineering and heads roll. Yeasterday, Bostonist heard that 119 applicants to the Harvard Business School are being denied admission after prematurely looking at the status of their application. An internet persona going by the name of "brookbond" posted intstructions on how to gain access to the ApplyYourself online admissions site to view the admission decision letters. A posting to a public forum on the BusinessWeek website showed methods to access the information nearly a month ahead of the anticipated mailing. In the course of 9 hours (before the letters were removed from the site) 119 applicants followed the instructions and took a sneak peek at the results of their application for Harvard’s Business School.

What they saw is, as they say, history. Yesterday Harvard announced that the 119 applicants that accessed the system following the brookbond method would be denied admission to the school, regardless of prior decisions. The 119 applicants that accessed the site have been called "unethical at best" by Kim Clark, dean of Harvard Business School. The punishment seems a little harsh in a world where corporate spying, hacking, and reverse engineering are often the rule. With the high visibility of the incident Bostonist can understand Harvard may not want to encourage such behavior in the future. Bostonist would like to know if given the chance George W. would have taken a peek at the results before he was admitted to the b-school It’s all about the Veritas.

Update: MIT's Business School, the Sloan School of Management says that they will also give the boot to 39 people that hacked their site. Stanford has said it will make no changes to their admissions decisions becuase of this peeking.

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Comments [rss]

  • nina

    How 'bout MCI Walpole?

    Dee-Yes, I think it's Harvard's fault that somehow their system was accessed, but most people wait to find out and don't cheat the process. Why should HBS be obligated to accept students who are cheating the admissions process? Even if their (the 119 hackers) intentions were in their own interest, they opened up material that is confidential. Bottom line, Harvard shouldn't have had a hackable system and the hackers shouldn't have hacked. Thus, Harvard has no obligation to accept them. My father is a prof (MD) and a director of one of their clinical departments, and my mother teaches at the medical school and is a dean. This is a touchy subject! I assume that while stanford has taken no defintitve action, most likely they won't accept those prospective students. Harvard's motto is Veritas-truth- and hacking just isn't very honest.

  • Dee

    Dishonest? How so? They accessed, through a ridiculous flaw in the website, their own records. they didn't breach any sercurity, because there wasn't any to breach... And the information would have been provided to them in a few months anyway, so what difference does it make? They capitalized on a shoddy system, but what harm did it cause?

  • Josh

    Point taken, Nina. I was being sarcastic, of course, and in reality would be delighted if the denizens of our nation's boardrooms were even half as ethical as the average denizen of, say, MCI-Concord.

  • Nina

    It's not as if HBS is desperate for applicants. It would be unethical for Harvard to accept dishonest people over the many other probably applicants. Think about it this way: these are the potential people that will be running corporate America, how would you like them managing your money? This is the online equivalant to breaking into an admissions office: any applicant who did that would be arrested, forget dissmissed, and any student would be expelled. we have enough crooked people in american business, must we give Ivy league educations to 119 more?

  • jon

    Agreed Josh, the "hack" was really only a simple procedure of viewing the code and amending a hidden field (seen clearly in the source code) to the URL after login.

    Pretty clever hack, I think they should give Brookbond a scholarship.

  • Josh

    Isn't b-school supposed to be about hustle and such? "Unethical at best" ought to be hearty praise at HBS - perhaps grounds for admission or a special scholarship - not a reason to get the boot.

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