School Monitoring Software Sacrifices Student Privacy for Unproven Promises of Safety. (www.eff.org)
from 101@reddthat.com to technology@lemmy.world on 06 Sep 23:09
https://reddthat.com/post/25352295

#technology

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fubo@lemmy.world on 06 Sep 23:40 next collapse

If your kids’ school laptops are surveilled, they’re surveilled by someone. Let’s call that someone Joe. Joe is a person who took a low-paying job that lets him surveil your kids. Joe likes his job, because he gets to surveil your kids. He gets to turn on the camera and look in your kids’ room. He gets to read the chat messages your kids send to their classmates.

Your kids would be better off without Joe in their lives. Joe is not a source of security. Joe is not protecting your kids; Joe is a threat to them.

sunzu2@thebrainbin.org on 06 Sep 23:51 next collapse

We know that positions with power and access to children will attract pedophiles this is a well known, thoroughly confirmed fact.

And yet we got apologist justifying another government over reach.

gnuplusmatt@reddthat.com on 07 Sep 07:16 next collapse

I work IT in schools. There is limited surveillance tools on college owned devices. Mainly logging of web traffic. Screens can be viewed when on campus network, not reachable off campus.

No one in our department has time to waste looking at web history or screens. Teachers don’t bother to use it much either. We only look at it when directed by college executive or when I go in there at the end of term to clear the alerts.

I’d imagine most other schools are similar, no one gives a shit what kids are doing on their devices

tutus@sh.itjust.works on 07 Sep 08:39 next collapse

no one gives a shit what kids are doing on their devices

Except Joe. And people like Joe. Whose surveillance of kids is now not only easier, but sanctioned.

IAmNotACat@lemmy.world on 07 Sep 11:12 collapse

Exactly. It’s like a tacit admission that the only reason to have this stuff is for people like Joe.

sunzu2@thebrainbin.org on 07 Sep 12:33 next collapse

Trust me bro, joe is a good guy!

technocrit@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 07 Sep 14:52 collapse

He’s super busy! No time to abuse our completely abuseable system…

TriflingToad@lemmy.world on 08 Sep 00:22 collapse

my highschool has 1,500 kids and 2 IT guys. We have over 100 broken laptops rn. They’re overworked minimum wage workers like everyone else working at public schools. They don’t even look at what kids do. I’ve seen only 1 story in the 4 years I’ve been in HS where someone actually got in trouble for messing with stuff on the computer and it was because they were trying to brute force a network password they didn’t have access to.

TriflingToad@lemmy.world on 08 Sep 00:18 collapse

kids looking at porn on their school laptops is why the tools exist, not for pedos. ‘Joe’ is 0.001% of people, not the majority!

IAmNotACat@lemmy.world on 08 Sep 08:26 collapse

That’s a number you just made up.

Either way, use a blacklist then. If you really care about what sites they access, use a whitelist.

TriflingToad@lemmy.world on 09 Sep 18:33 collapse

use a blacklist then

They do.

That’s a number you just made up.

you’re purposefully ignoring my point

FiskFisk33@startrek.website on 07 Sep 10:03 next collapse

That’s what it looks like when it works well. There’s no way for parents to know if its a Joe situation or not.

It’s not like it hasn’t happened before. cbsnews.com/…/610k-settlement-in-school-webcam-sp…

tromars@feddit.org on 09 Sep 11:23 collapse

So if no one gives a shit anyway you don’t need the surveillance capabilities anyway, right?

gnuplusmatt@reddthat.com on 09 Sep 22:37 collapse

a private school needs to give the appearance that they do, or at least have this capability when someone asks. On the ground, its barely used

Mediocre_Bard@lemmy.world on 07 Sep 15:17 next collapse

You’re pretty far off base here.

DarkCloud@lemmy.world on 07 Sep 15:39 next collapse

Just to clarify, the majority of active pedophiles are opportunistic, they go after those they have access to.

This is why every industry that has greater access to children, also has an greater number of pedophile scandals… It’s a problem, and yeah, giving someone direct access via a computer to a child’s digital life is a form of access that might be used opportunistically by such people.

TriflingToad@lemmy.world on 08 Sep 00:14 collapse

I don’t think you understand just how locked down modern school laptops are. They don’t have access to Google snake, much less something like discord to chat with their friends. I semi-volenteer with my highschools library and I have to make tickets because some kids date/time was wrong and they didn’t have the ability to fix it. We don’t even have the ability to share PowerPoints anymore. The people that look on them are also the overworked IT guys that have to deal with these BS date/time tickets all day.
Teenagers are crafty and don’t have respect for the technology provided to them. I’ve seen (on multiple occasions) my peers beat the screen of the free laptop repeatedly if it’s too ‘slow’.

Arkouda@lemmy.ca on 06 Sep 23:44 next collapse

…on students’ school-issued machines and accounts.

These are school issued machines, and like all machines issued by a 3rd party for use under their supervision, they come with monitoring software.

This isn’t some dystopian issue, and frankly, students should not be using school issued machines for private chats or photo storage, and should absolutely have their search history monitored while using said devices.

Sundial@lemm.ee on 06 Sep 23:51 next collapse

These aren’t necessarily the computers you and I grew up on where they had a dedicated computer lab room for use during class time. These are devices they take everywhere with them, even home. Now imagine some creepy school IT administrator decided to peek on the Webcams of kids while they’re on their room?

catloaf@lemm.ee on 07 Sep 00:06 next collapse

No need to imagine, it’s linked in the article: cbsnews.com/…/610k-settlement-in-school-webcam-sp…

JustARegularNerd@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 07 Sep 06:53 collapse

God the school’s response is so sleazy and unapologetic

sunzu2@thebrainbin.org on 07 Sep 12:31 collapse

that's how they act when they get caught, remember the Catholic Church

Brkdncr@lemmy.world on 07 Sep 00:46 next collapse

Camera/mic access seems like overreach. PII should be obfuscated and only accessible with an audited workflow that includes an access review.

Modern off the shelf MDM is capable of this.

Arkouda@lemmy.ca on 07 Sep 00:58 next collapse

I understand the difference between a laptop and PC thanks.

Now imagine if, and hear me out, one didn’t bring school hardware home so some “creepy IT administrator” doesn’t have access.

“Save the kids” arguments always fall flat on the face when the solution is as simple as leaving school devices at school.

shalafi@lemmy.world on 07 Sep 01:16 next collapse

They have to take it home for homework.

Arkouda@lemmy.ca on 07 Sep 06:37 collapse

No, they don’t. I am sure the majority have a computer or smart phone at home, and if not libraries exist for a reason.

Mediocre_Bard@lemmy.world on 07 Sep 15:21 collapse

There are more people in poverty without a computer than you realize. Now write me a 5 paragraph essay with correct source citation on your smart phone.

SadSadSatellite@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 07 Sep 01:19 next collapse

Yeah it’s a good thing homework doesn’t exist.

Arkouda@lemmy.ca on 07 Sep 06:46 collapse

Good thing for home computers, smart devices, and libraries eh?

catloaf@lemm.ee on 07 Sep 12:26 collapse

Good thing nobody is poor!

Arkouda@lemmy.ca on 07 Sep 16:17 collapse

Good thing poor people have access to public libraries. I know from experience.

irreticent@lemmy.world on 07 Sep 23:07 collapse

There are “book deserts” where it can be difficult to visit a public library.

There are plenty of articles showing how libraries across the country are closing, usually in poor neighborhoods.

Arkouda@lemmy.ca on 08 Sep 15:55 collapse

Sounds like a bigger problem than schools monitoring the use of devices issued to children.

Might want to get that sorted.

irreticent@lemmy.world on 08 Sep 23:21 collapse

The point is that your argument falls apart considering it kept being propped up by your assertion that kids can just use the library computers if they’re too poor to have a computer at home.

But that doesn’t matter; you’re not actually here to debate in good faith.

“When our position on an issue is no longer based on curiosity and the desire for the truth, but a desire to win a debate. When someone reaches this stage of discourse, there’s no need to try and persuade them.”

Arkouda@lemmy.ca on 09 Sep 14:02 collapse

The point is that your argument falls apart considering it kept being propped up by your assertion that kids can just use the library computers if they’re too poor to have a computer at home.

But that doesn’t matter; you’re not actually here to debate in good faith.

Debate Pervert:

“When our position on an issue is no longer based on curiosity and the desire for the truth, but a desire to win a debate. When someone reaches this stage of discourse, there’s no need to try and persuade them.”

That wasn’t my argument, and is still a viable option. Libraries still exist.

My point and argument was: It is the schools decision on what happens with school hardware.

Have any thing to say to my point without being combative? Or do I add you to the pile of people not worth interacting with in the future?

irreticent@lemmy.world on 10 Sep 00:19 collapse

That wasn’t my argument, and is still a viable option. Libraries still exist.

That’s a lie. You used that as an argument twice (that I saw, maybe more).

You: No one is forced to use a laptop. Libraries exist with free internet access and computer.

Also you: Good thing poor people have access to public libraries. I know from experience

My point and argument was: It is the schools decision on what happens with school hardware.

No, I didn’t argue with you about that. That was an argument you were having with multiple other people. I just called you out on the fact that what you were claiming about libraries is not always true for everyone. I cited my source and proved you wrong. Yet you still seem to want to argue so you decided to change the subject of our debate.

Have any thing to say to my point without being combative?

I already said what I wanted to say. Unlike you I don’t feel the need to argue about everything.

You have been antagonistic toward everyone in this post that you’ve interacted with. What makes you think anyone would have any respect for you enough to be polite? If you are combative then people will most likely be combative in their replies.

Or do I add you to the pile of people not worth interacting with in the future?

I find it somewhat sad that you keep saying that to people you get tired of debating. You say it a lot. Please feel free to add me to that list. I’ll survive.

conciselyverbose@sh.itjust.works on 07 Sep 13:45 collapse

Many of the kids affected have no access to another device. The whole reason schools supply hardware now is because it’s needed to access their educational materials, and it’s massively inequitable to only have students who have money able to develop their skills at home.

gwen@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 07 Sep 07:31 collapse

wait schools dont have computer labs anymore??? in ALL my schools and the one im in right now we have them

Sundial@lemm.ee on 07 Sep 13:49 collapse

I honestly don’t know if they do or don’t have. I’d imagine it also varies by region. I just know schools have started giving out laptops to kids to take home if they are needed.

Darkassassin07@lemmy.ca on 06 Sep 23:52 next collapse

Yeah, when i was in school; there were no devices issued to students. We had ‘computer labs’. Ie; a room full of computers for student use. There was always one computer for the teachers to use that had a remote-desktop interface monitoring every screen in the room live. They could always see what you were doing, lockout your keyboard/mouse, blank your display.

This really doesn’t seem any different.

I could understand outrage if students were require to install this on their own hardware; but school issued devices are under the schools monitoring and control. Always have been.

EleventhHour@lemmy.world on 06 Sep 23:56 next collapse

These are different because kids take these computers home, and it’s some random working for a 3rd party monitoring what’s going on.

Creepy.

Darkassassin07@lemmy.ca on 07 Sep 00:07 collapse

kids take these computers home

I feel like that is the bigger problem. These aren’t private/personal devices; students shouldn’t be treating them as personal devices. Especially knowing it’s a monitored device.

Properly educating students on the use of these devices is the solution. Not telling schools to turn a blind eye to the use of their own equipment.

TimeSquirrel@kbin.melroy.org on 07 Sep 00:27 next collapse

I mean yeah, I don't watch porn on an office computer at work after all. They should have their own devices for all that stuff. School devices = school-related activity only, no more.

youngalfred@lemm.ee on 07 Sep 00:41 next collapse

Like doing homework in your room? Where now the monitor can turn on your webcam without you knowing and watch you in your personal space?

Darkassassin07@lemmy.ca on 07 Sep 00:56 next collapse

And again; I think that’s a bit of a separate issue. These devices shouldn’t be equipped with cameras, let alone have the camera monitored/accessible.

The actual activity happening on the device; running applications, what’s on screen/in storage, even it’s location (with informed notice of said tracking) sure. but there’s no need to monitor/access the camera regardless of how or where the device is used.

A simple piece of tape fixes this problem. (plus education to teach students why, ofc)

gwen@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 07 Sep 07:34 next collapse

tape on the computer camera? my family’s done that for years on all/most of our devices lmao

TimeSquirrel@kbin.melroy.org on 07 Sep 14:21 collapse

When doing zoom calls for work I do it behind a curtain. Nobody sees my home at all. Then I cover the cam when not in use. These are just common sense privacy measures we should be teaching them anyway.

sunzu2@thebrainbin.org on 07 Sep 00:44 collapse

Even if kid limits it to that, this arrangement is still no appropriate.

CosmicTurtle0@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 07 Sep 00:49 collapse

These are fucking kids. They are still learning what devices do and what their appropriate use is. If they are like me, they have probably already found ways to watch porn, monitor their crush’s computer, read their email, and get into their webcam.

It’s not lack of education.

It’s lack of impulse control.

Darkassassin07@lemmy.ca on 07 Sep 01:14 collapse

If they are like me, they have probably already found ways to watch porn, monitor their crush’s computer, read their email, and get into their webcam.

I got into quite a bit of similar mischief as a (pre)teen; but I didn’t do any of it on equipment that I knew was monitored (at least, monitored and signed out to me…)

catloaf@lemm.ee on 07 Sep 01:49 collapse

Then you were the exception.

Arkouda@lemmy.ca on 07 Sep 00:43 collapse

I agree that this is no different, and has the same solution: Don’t use the schools computers for things that aren’t for school and you won’t have no problems.

catloaf@lemm.ee on 06 Sep 23:53 next collapse

The article has a pretty convincing argument against it. You should read the whole thing.

Arkouda@lemmy.ca on 07 Sep 00:35 collapse

I read the article and it is not in any way convincing.

Sorry to burst your bubble.

sunzu2@thebrainbin.org on 06 Sep 23:55 next collapse

Justify it however you want it but this is a huge over reach esp since we got some shiti 3p vendor involved to middle man this.

I totally trust them not to sell that data after it is "properly anonymized" or "leaked" 🤡

Arkouda@lemmy.ca on 07 Sep 00:31 collapse

Can you explain to me how a 3rd party putting monitoring software on their own hardware is an over reach?

sunzu2@thebrainbin.org on 07 Sep 00:42 collapse

School is the counterparty and a state actor with everything that entails sign a poorly negotiated, likely corruption ridden contract with some trust me bro we don't sell data, vendor, ie third party.

Now your child is subject to a contract arrangement that you are not privy too that enables some "dudes" to track your child's usage of equipment.

If you don't see this as an overeach, society has really degraded esp in context of the child abuse issues we are coming grips with.

Arkouda@lemmy.ca on 07 Sep 00:48 collapse

School is the counterparty and a state actor with everything that entails sign a poorly negotiated, likely corruption ridden contract with some trust me bro we don’t sell data, vendor, ie third party.

What could be gained by monitoring someones school activity that is not already bought and sold by social media companies that the majority use excessively and daily?

Now your child is subject to a contract arrangement that you are not privy too that enables some “dudes” to track your child’s usage of equipment.

Don’t use third party hardware if you are worried about being monitored.

If you don’t see this as an overeach, society has really degraded esp in context of the child abuse issues we are coming grips with.

If you could make a real argument that isn’t a personal attack or logical fallacy that would be great.

[deleted] on 07 Sep 00:51 collapse

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Chozo@fedia.io on 07 Sep 00:10 next collapse

This isn't isolated to school-issued equipment. While this article is mostly talking about high school students, this same situation plagues upper education, as well. My roommate was recently taking some college courses from home, and the proctoring software they require installs rootkit-level spyware on his computer and tried monitoring our entire network activity.

Arkouda@lemmy.ca on 07 Sep 00:26 next collapse

That is 100% a different issue.

Chozo@fedia.io on 07 Sep 00:35 collapse

Not really, though. In both scenarios, somebody attending a public school is required to have invasive spyware running on their devices.

Arkouda@lemmy.ca on 07 Sep 00:38 collapse

The difference between schools installing the programs on their own hardware and installing them on personal devices is stark and I cannot take any argument seriously that ignores this.

Chozo@fedia.io on 07 Sep 00:40 collapse

You're missing the point. Either way, the use of this invasive software is required in order to attend public school.

I cannot take any argument seriously that ignores this.

Arkouda@lemmy.ca on 07 Sep 00:53 collapse

Either way, the use of this invasive software is required in order to attend public school.

Oh? Who is forcing the use of school issued equipment?

Last time I checked one did not need a school issued device to attend a public school. In fact I would go out on a limb and say the majority are too underfunded to give every student a device in the first place.

Chozo@fedia.io on 07 Sep 01:00 next collapse

Oh? Who is forcing the use of school issued equipment?

The schools. Many assignments are given 100% digitally now, with no option for a pencil-and-paper version outside of special needs situations, which not every student qualifies for.

Last time I checked

"was clearly a long time ago" is how that sentence should've ended.

Arkouda@lemmy.ca on 07 Sep 06:38 collapse

“was clearly a long time ago” is how that sentence should’ve ended.

Source something that proves a single thing you have said or jog on.

Chozo@fedia.io on 07 Sep 07:10 collapse

How about the article you're commenting on?

Arkouda@lemmy.ca on 07 Sep 16:19 collapse

Either way, the use of this invasive software is required in order to attend public school.

Show me where this is stated in the article.

Chozo@fedia.io on 08 Sep 01:27 collapse

Tell me you never read the article without saying you never read the article.

Arkouda@lemmy.ca on 08 Sep 15:53 collapse

Allow me to make it easier for you by posting the entire article and you can point to me where it says " the use of this invasive software is required in order to attend public school".

Imagine your search terms, key-strokes, private chats and photographs are being monitored every time they are sent. Millions of students across the country don’t have to imagine this deep surveillance of their most private communications: it’s a reality that comes with their school districts’ decision to install AI-powered monitoring software such as Gaggle and GoGuardian on students’ school-issued machines and accounts. As we demonstrated with our own Red Flag Machine, however, this software flags and blocks websites for spurious reasons and often disproportionately targets disadvantaged, minority and LGBTQ youth.

The companies making the software claim it’s all done for the sake of student safety: preventing self-harm, suicide, violence, and drug and alcohol abuse. While a noble goal, given that suicide is the second highest cause of death among American youth 10-14 years old, no comprehensive or independent studies have shown an increase in student safety linked to the usage of this software. Quite to the contrary: a recent comprehensive RAND research study shows that such AI monitoring software may cause more harm than good.

That study also found that how to respond to alerts is left to the discretion of the school districts themselves. Due to a lack of resources to deal with mental health, schools often refer these alerts to law enforcement officers who are not trained and ill-equipped to deal with youth mental crises. When police respond to youth who are having such episodes, the resulting encounters can lead to disastrous results. So why are schools still using the software–when a congressional investigation found a need for “federal action to protect students’ civil rights, safety, and privacy”? Why are they trading in their students’ privacy for a dubious-at-best marketing claim of safety?

Experts suggest it’s because these supposed technical solutions are easier to implement than the effective social measures that schools often lack resources to implement. I spoke with Isabelle Barbour, a public health consultant who has experience working with schools to implement mental health supports. She pointed out that there are considerable barriers to families, kids, and youth accessing health care and mental health supports at a community level. There is also a lack of investment in supporting schools to effectively address student health and well-being. This leads to a situation where many students come to school with needs that have been unmet and these needs impact the ability of students to learn. Although there are clear and proven measures that work to address the burdens youth face, schools often need support (time, mental health expertise, community partners, and a budget) to implement these measures. Edtech companies market largely unproven plug-and-play products to educational professionals who are stretched thin and seeking a path forward to help kids. Is it any wonder why schools sign contracts which are easy to point to when questioned about what they are doing with regard to the youth mental health epidemic?

One example: Gaggle in marketing to school districts claims to have saved 5,790 student lives between 2018 and 2023, according to shaky metrics they themselves designed. All the while they keep the inner-workings of their AI monitoring secret, making it difficult for outsiders to scrutinize and measure its effectiveness. We give Gaggle an “F”

Reports of the errors and inability of the AI flagging to understand context keep popping up. When the Lawrence, Kansas school district signed a $162,000 contract with Gaggle, no one batted an eye: It joined a growing number of school districts (currently ~1,500) nation-wide using the software. Then, school administrators called in nearly an entire class to explain photographs Gaggle’s AI had labeled as “nudity” because the software wouldn’t tell them:

“Yet all students involved maintain that none of their photos had nudity in them. Some were even able to determine which images were deleted by comparing backup storage systems to what remained on their school accounts. Still, the photos were deleted from school accounts, so there is no way to verify what Gaggle detected. Even school administrators can’t see the images it flags.”

Young journalists within the school district raised concerns about how Gaggle’s surveillance of students impacted their privacy and free speech rights. As journalist Max McCoy points out in his article for the Kansas Reflector, “news

[deleted] on 07 Sep 01:49 collapse

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bitwolf@lemmy.one on 07 Sep 21:56 collapse

I’ve had to use that horrible software in university. I asked for accommodations because I use Linux and they issued me a university laptop for exams.

I would schedule it at the school testing center and take it there just to avoid it.

Badeendje@lemmy.world on 07 Sep 00:11 next collapse

Why? Can you elaborate on why this is not an issue and kids should be monitored by a 3rd party?

Arkouda@lemmy.ca on 07 Sep 00:26 collapse

I already made that clear in my original comment.

[deleted] on 07 Sep 00:42 next collapse

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Badeendje@lemmy.world on 07 Sep 01:16 collapse

No you did not. You just stated that this was the case. I’m asking why that is/should be acceptable.

Why is it normal to put monitoring software on?
Why does a 3rd party need to monitor it?
What are they monitoring that would be considered acceptable?

I honestly ask, because I can’t think of any reason.

Or is this similar to “mass shootings are a fact of life”?

Arkouda@lemmy.ca on 07 Sep 06:48 collapse

No you did not. You just stated that this was the case. I’m asking why that is/should be acceptable.

These are school issued machines, and like all machines issued by a 3rd party for use under their supervision, they come with monitoring software.

Clear as day. Glad we cleared this up.

Badeendje@lemmy.world on 07 Sep 07:28 collapse

Troll… that is not an explanation on why.

Arkouda@lemmy.ca on 07 Sep 16:22 collapse

Yes it is an explanation why.

Your question: Why is/should this be acceptable.

My answer: These are school issued machines, and like all machines issued by a 3rd party for use under their supervision, they come with monitoring software.

It is acceptable because it is the schools property and they can do as they wish with it. Everyone else is free to not use those machines.

This is not a hard thing to grasp.

But since you are just being combative we are done here.

Badeendje@lemmy.world on 07 Sep 16:49 collapse

That is not an explanation on why this is the case. Cowardly slinking away into the shadows is par for the course.

Just for thought:

  • Is everyone free not to use them? (Does the school offer solutions for byod?)
  • Can people afford to make another choice while at the same time being forced to use laptops?
  • Is the type of monitoring reasonable and proportional?

I’ll bet a dollar the answer to this all is NO.

The whole pro company schtick is getting old.

Arkouda@lemmy.ca on 07 Sep 17:43 collapse

Cowardly slinking away into the shadows is par for the course.

Offer a real conversation to others instead of being combative and maybe you will have better results with people in the future.

The whole pro company schtick is getting old.

I never once stated I was “pro company”. Another tip, free of charge, don’t put words in peoples mouths. Makes your already faulty argument moot.

Is everyone free not to use them?

Yes.

Can people afford to make another choice while at the same time being forced to use laptops?

No one is forced to use a laptop. Libraries exist with free internet access and computer.

Is the type of monitoring reasonable and proportional?

Yes. If you do not think it is I can only assume you weren’t a child when the internet became a thing. I was “monitored” on school computers in the 90’s and this is no different.

Now are you actually going to participate in good faith or should I simply block you?

Badeendje@lemmy.world on 07 Sep 18:51 collapse

I asked you WHY… and you still have not answered. But at the same time attacked the tone of the message.

And if your viewpoint ignores Personal rights in favor of corporations stomping all over them you are by extension pro corp. It’s your words not mine. But sure.

Go ahead and block me… as I can’t imagine any proper answer on WHY this behavior by schools and companies should be acceptable will ever come.

Edit: “it happened to me so it must be acceptable”… Is some Stockholm level stuff you should maybe discuss with a professional. It’s the underlying reason abused kids become abusers.

Arkouda@lemmy.ca on 07 Sep 19:12 collapse

You are insufferable. Good bye.

Badeendje@lemmy.world on 07 Sep 21:34 collapse

Say the user defending unnecessary monitoring of kids

Mediocre_Bard@lemmy.world on 07 Sep 15:19 collapse

Damn right.

[deleted] on 06 Sep 23:49 next collapse

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dohpaz42@lemmy.world on 06 Sep 23:52 next collapse

The rights of children, especially privacy, has never been a priority for anybody except the children themselves.

Mediocre_Bard@lemmy.world on 07 Sep 15:18 collapse

Have you worked with kids? They’re nice, but they’re not autonomous people.

youngalfred@lemm.ee on 07 Sep 00:11 next collapse

OK so that’s nuts they installed a private ‘AI’ monitoring software that they have no oversight or control over. From the article, they can’t even see what it flags as inappropriate - it just flags and deletes.
A school admin should never hand over that much control!

sunzu2@thebrainbin.org on 07 Sep 01:47 collapse

School contracting is corruption central.

SGG@lemmy.world on 07 Sep 00:21 next collapse

If a school provides a device to a student to take home there’s two possible outcomes.

  1. They provide a managed device, and with any management tool, there’s a way to invade privacy, intended or not.

  2. They provide an unmanaged device and get sued by parents for letting their"innocent snowflake" access unwanted content.

In both instances there’s something to legitimately complain about, but I still say the first option is the better one. The problem comes with oversight and auditing on the use of those management tools.

Not to mention that even with the second option of unmanaged devices, invasion of privacy can still occur if students are stupid enough to use the school provided accounts (Google, 365,etc)

youngalfred@lemm.ee on 07 Sep 00:46 next collapse

There’s other ways - write it into the conditions of loan that it’s not the school’s responsibility to monitor student use when at home.

There are solutions that allow monitoring only on campus - both the monitoring person and the student need to be on-site for the software to contact a licensing server. No server contact=no monitoring.
And never bring ‘AI’ into it.

Badeendje@lemmy.world on 07 Sep 01:21 collapse

What are we monitoring? How kids get dressed, if they pick their nose while using the computer?

Blocking sites does not require on device “monitoring”. Locking down a machine does not require monitoring. So why this invasive level of monitoring.

Deceptichum@quokk.au on 07 Sep 03:12 collapse

It’s about monitoring what the children are using on the device not turning on the camera and spying on them naked.

4am@lemm.ee on 07 Sep 04:51 next collapse

In America we’ve had several instances of undisclosed webcam monitoring of children via school issued devices.

Deceptichum@quokk.au on 07 Sep 06:14 collapse

But that’s not what the article is talking about.

sunzu2@thebrainbin.org on 07 Sep 12:30 collapse

i am sorry people are using critical thinking and common sense when dealing untrustworthy actors such as a school district and some shiti 3p vendor.

if they peep on your kid, what is your gonna about it? cry to daddy police? 🤡

i guess y'all must in live in a different country lol

Badeendje@lemmy.world on 07 Sep 07:34 next collapse

Yeah, that’s just weird. Either it’s a managed device and can be used only with what is pre configured… Or the invasion of privacy is the goal. Creeping on kids… I’m in your PC reading your dm’s…

Mediocre_Bard@lemmy.world on 07 Sep 15:19 collapse

Lol, wtf? Read a book.

hddsx@lemmy.ca on 07 Sep 00:47 next collapse

Oh man. That’s work that office IT. At my office, the just log everything but unless you do something wrong, no one checks it.

Every student should be issued a webcam shade

Feathercrown@lemmy.world on 07 Sep 01:27 next collapse

This is every school surveillance software

imnapr@discuss.tchncs.de on 07 Sep 04:45 next collapse

This headline reads like an onion article lmfao

Xatolos@reddthat.com on 07 Sep 08:55 next collapse

school-issued machines

Stopped reading right there. Whenever you are issued a device, you should immediately assume it’s being monitored by the owner of the device. This goes for school/job/etc. The owner of the device will always be monitoring it for reasons of making sure you are using the device for intended purpose to making sure you aren’t using it for illegal purposes.

conciselyverbose@sh.itjust.works on 07 Sep 13:39 next collapse

That’s fine.

But third parties should still be heavily limited on the information they can gather from just class work usage.

[deleted] on 07 Sep 15:36 next collapse

.

ArcaneSlime@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 07 Sep 16:04 next collapse

I know that, you know that, many know that, but many don’t. Imo they should be required to inform you, preferably with a splash screen on boot or something similar that says “monitored by XXXXX” or something. Especially for things like schools where it’s more likely kids won’t know it (and will be more likely to become privacy advocates for life from knowingly having theirs violated.)

TriflingToad@lemmy.world on 08 Sep 00:04 collapse

“this browser is being managed by your organization” exists

ArcaneSlime@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 08 Sep 03:08 collapse

Something like that, yeah. They don’t all notify.

Xanis@lemmy.world on 07 Sep 22:05 next collapse

The first thing I did when I was issued a laptop for a job was check for monitoring software of any type. The second thing I did was become extremely suspicious when I couldn’t find any. I suppose the rule is “most likely” or “more often than not” while also being “always assume”.

Zink@programming.dev on 07 Sep 22:17 collapse

I might have the exception to this. I’m able to dual boot my work laptop, as can the other engineers in my department. So it’s effectively a Linux machine under my exclusive administration. The only request from my IT department was how to format the host name.

I’m still not taking chances with that thing though, even when on my home network. The rules exist even if there’s a 99.99% chance they won’t be enforced. I have nothing to gain from doing nefarious shit on it just to prove a point, lol.

MonkderVierte@lemmy.ml on 07 Sep 09:43 next collapse

There’s Steven Black Hosts for blocking gambling, social media, fakenews and porn sites. Should be enough for a school, no?

Mediocre_Bard@lemmy.world on 07 Sep 15:16 collapse

Our system flags key words for staff intervention. This has provided earlier support for suicidal students and earlier intervention for developing threats.

Mediocre_Bard@lemmy.world on 07 Sep 15:14 next collapse

At the junior high level last year, two potential suicides were flagged by search terms, a kid was caught dispensing fentanyl when a peer searched ‘how much fentanyl to take’, and an early stage threat was detected when was looking up bomb-making instructions.

That’s what I know about from my caseload.

Aatube@kbin.melroy.org on 08 Sep 16:19 collapse

Woah, what did the school use?

Mediocre_Bard@lemmy.world on 08 Sep 20:34 collapse

No idea. I just work there. Sometimes the computer goes ding and we call in people to haul off a kid. /s

Seriously though, from the teacher-side it is called Class Policy, but I don’t think that is the system that monitors and flags.

ansiz@lemmy.world on 07 Sep 20:36 collapse

They were searching backpacks and lockers in my high school back in the 90’s, student privacy has been dead for a long time. And at the same time they let students keep rifles in their cars on school grounds during hunting season so those students could hunt before school. There’s no real logic at work, just school boards reacting.