Spying defies belief

19.02.2010
What is it about large organizations that make it easy for them to lose their collective minds? It seems that the news is full of cases of this kind of lunacy that defy belief.

By way of an example, I just read about how in Pennsylvania, through state and federal grants, was able to supply something like 1,800 high school students in the district with laptops. Fantastic! That's the kind of initiative that more schools and school districts should be undertaking.

But it turns out that somewhere on the administrative side of the district someone had what they thought was a good idea. This good idea consisted of adding software to the laptops that would allow school and administrative staff to spy on students using (and I'm not making this up) the laptop's Web cams! This meant that, any time the laptops were running and whether the students were at school or at home, someone could see, hear and record what the student was doing. Let me underline that: At any time.

First, you have to wonder how the district's administrators came to conceive of this program. This district is not in some hick, back water where no one would understand the issue; the two high schools in the district are in wealthy neighborhoods with the kind of families that, should they feel so moved, have the knowledge and resources to take people to court for things like violation of privacy. So even the most naïve administrative wonk should have thought twice about this program but, no, obviously that didn't happen.

Next, you have to marvel at the people who were tasked with making this program work. Someone in authority had to have said to someone in IT, "We want to spy on students through their new laptops … how are we going to do this?"