When the pandemic started last year, countless forms of inequality were exposed – including the millions of American families who don’t have access to laptops or broadband internet. After some delays, schools across the country jumped into action and distributed technology to allow students to learn remotely. The catch? They ended up spying on students. “For their own good”, of course.
According to recent research by the Center for Democracy and Technology (CDT), “86% of teachers reported that, during the pandemic, schools provided tablets, laptops, or Chromebooks to students at twice the rate (43%) prior to the pandemic, an illustration of schools’ attempts to close disparities in digital access.”
The problem is, a lot of those electronics were being used to monitor students, even combing through private chats, emails and documents all in the name of protecting them. More than 80% of surveyed teachers and 77% of surveyed high school students told the CDT that their schools use surveillance software on those devices, and the more reliant students are on those electronics, unable to afford supplementary phones or tablets, the more they are subjected to scrutiny.
“We knew that there were students out there having ideations around suicide, self-harm and those sorts of things,” a school administrator explained to the CDT researchers. “[W]e found this [student activity monitoring software]. We could also do a good job with students who might be thinking about bullying … [I]f I can save one student from committing suicide, I feel like that platform is well worth every dime that we paid for [it].”
Thousands of school districts across the United States have installed surveillance software on school-provided devices to monitor their students’ online interactions. If a student emails or chats with another student saying they’ve been thinking of hurting themselves or that there is trouble at home, an AI bot or a human moderator watching over the messages in real time can send an alert to a teacher or administrator, allowing the teacher to jump in within minutes and ask if everything is OK.
These programs, such as Bark, Gnosis IQ, Gaggle, and Lightspeed, can cost the schools tens of thousands of dollars to implement, and they can be set up to search for language and online behavior indicating the possibility of violent tendencies, suicidal ideation, drug use, pornography use, or eating disorders.
https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2021/oct/11/us-students-digital-surveillance-schools
Electrical tape over the camera. Still, this is unacceptable.
we covered up my son's school issued chrome book camera. The teacher started to mark him absent. We contacted the teacher and she told us that he has to be visible at all times during the "scheduled school day". We told her NO. Eventually we settled on - camera turned on during the role call portion of each class. then it was covered back up.
The problem is that, even though the camera may be covered... EVERYTHING said in the room can be heard over the computer speakers and microphone. Unless the computer is completely turned off, any sounds in that room with the computer can be heard... and any admin can get access to "listen".
Computers can even pick up conversations from OTHER rooms in the house, just like leaving an open microphone laying there.
If you are going to put tape over the camera, you may want to put tape over the microphone and speaker as well to muffle any sounds. Alternative is to play music on the computer, even at low volumes. That will crum up anyone's ability to eaves drop.
Don't count on turning off the device. Cell phones can still monitor you when powered off. They go into a sort of sleep mode even when instructed to shut down. I wouldn't be surprised if laptops do this too. No surprise that more and more devices don't let you remove the battery.