Monday,
September 9, 2002
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Feature |
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Soldier of the future
plagiarised
Greg Frost
When the Massachusetts
Institute of Technology announced in March that it won a $50
million grant to design the US Army's "soldier of the
future," the project was hailed as the stuff of science
fiction and comic book heroes. MIT has now grudgingly
acknowledged that it copied images from the sci-fi comic book
Radix. |
WHEN
MIT announced in March that it won a $50 million grant to design hi-tech
gear for the US Army's "soldier of the future," the project
was hailed as the stuff of science fiction and comic book heroes.
It turns out there was
a lot more to those plaudits than most people realised.
The Massachusetts
Institute of Technology grudgingly acknowledged that it copied images
from the sci-fi comic book, ‘Radix’ as part of its winning bid to
host a research centre that aims to make soldiers partly invisible and
allow them to clear 20-foot (6-metre) walls in a single bound.
But with the Canadian
creators of ‘Radix’ crying foul and weighing their legal options,
the tale may not end there.
The illustration in
question — a masked female soldier —appeared on page 13 of a grant
proposal MIT submitted to the Pentagon to host the high-tech Institute
for Soldier Nanotechnologies.
When MIT won the grant,
beating out other schools such as Cornell University, national news
media used the image to illustrate the kinds of futuristic warrior gear
that the institute hoped to develop.
"It was an
innocent use," MIT spokesman Ken Campbell said. "We didn't
know it was from anyone else's artwork." The university issued a
statement explaining its stance after an article appeared in the Boston
Globe.
MIT officials have not
explained how the illustration made it into their grant proposal, but
Campbell said the university pulled the artwork from its Website in
April as soon as it learnt of the problem.
However, MIT's lawyers
have argued in at least one letter to the comic book's Canadian creators
that the university was within its legal right when it copied the
"Radix" image and submitted it to the Pentagon.
"Radix"
creator Ray Lai said fans of the comic book were the first to notice the
similarities between gun-toting lead character Val Fiores and MIT's
female warrior.
"The fans were
calling our publisher saying MIT had plagiarised Val," Lai told
Reuters from his home in Montreal, where he writes "Radix"
with his brother Ben.
"When we found
out, we were shocked."
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