Friday, October 31, 2014

Growing unease among parents, lawmakers over biometric student tracking systems...

A growing number of schools are using special tracking chips embedded in student ID cards or biometric scanners to track students, and the new technology is making many lawmakers nervous about its privacy implications.

The relatively new tracking technology allows schools to more accurately follow student attendance, lunch purchases and students who ride buses, but lawmakers in many states have banned specific types of student data collection over privacy concerns, Governing.com reports.

“This year, Florida became the first state to ban the use of biometric identification in its schools. Kansas said biometric data cannot be collected without student or parental consent. New Hampshire, Colorado and North Carolina said the state education departments cannot collect and store biometric data as part of student records.

“New Hampshire and Missouri lawmakers said schools can’t require students to use ID cards equipped with radio frequency identification (RFID) technology that can track them. The new laws are similar to one Oregon passed last year and what Rhode Island lawmakers passed in 2009,” according to the news site. Full story...

Related posts:
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  2. India angry over students radio-tagged in the USA...
  3. California student finds GPS device hidden in his car, FBI want it back...
  4. Texas schools track students with radio waves, just like tracking cattle... 
  5. NSA collecting millions of faces from web images...
  6. Hey Paypal, why do you need access to my microphone, camera and photos?

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