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School Administrator Boasts About Spying On Students Using Laptop Webcams

Huffington Post    
First Posted: 04/28/10 06:12 AM ET Updated: 05/25/11 04:40 PM ET

*See photos and video below*

Computers have revolutionized classroom learning. But with this new teaching tool comes a new concern: student privacy.

During an interview with PBS, Dan Ackerman, a vice-principal at a Bronx high school, not only boasted of being able to monitor his students through webcams on their computers (unbeknownst to the students), but demonstrated it live, on camera.

At New York's Intermediate School 339, administrators wield the authority to directly, remotely monitor students' online activities to ensure that students are using the school's laptops appropriately. But it doesn't stop there.

As Ackerman demonstrated on the the Frontline documentary Digital Nation, when students activate their Webcam applications, they can be directly observed by teachers.

Although this sort of access is itself surprising, Ackerman's attitude may be even more chilling.

He tells the PBS reporter (at around 4 minutes at 30 seconds into the clip, which is below):

There's an observe button and it brings up their screen. Photobooth is always fun. A lot of kids are just on it to check their hair, do their makeup: the girls... They just use it like it's a mirror.
[...]

They don't even realize that we're watching. I always like to mess with them and take a picture (laughs). Nine times out of ten they duck out of the way, then they shut down and get back to work.

The photos below highlights what Ackerman is able to see of his students:

In yet another instance of 'school spying,' a Pennsylvania high school was recently accused of using laptop webcams to monitor students without their knowledge, both in school and at home.

The Associated Press reports on a civil suit brought against the school district on Frebruary 16 by Harriton High School student Blake Robbins and his parents, Michael and Holly Robbins:

They accused the school of turning on the webcam in his computer while it was inside their Penn Valley home, which they allege violated wiretap laws and his right to privacy.

On February 18, the school issued a response, in which they admitted to accessing the Webcams, but only to track 'missing' laptops. The district has stated that Webcams were accessed 42 times over the past 14 months, resulting in the recovery of 18 laptops, AP reports.

Merion School District officials vowed to enact stronger privacy policies. The FBI is currently investigating.

(via BoingBoing)

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This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
04:37 PM on 04/20/2010
How is this different than the Pennsylvania case? Has anyone notified authorities in NY?
10:41 AM on 03/02/2010
this is no different than if the administrator was looking through these kids bedroom window. he should be arrested along with anyone else that used the webcams to "monitor" what kids are doing.

i think the real purpose of this is clear and simple. it started out as a way to "recover stolen laptops" but has now turned into a perverts wet dream. this must be stopped now.
12:25 PM on 03/10/2010
Yeah it is quite clear the guy is really going for child porn. Should be arrested like any other pervert.
10:37 PM on 03/01/2010
1. Turning on the camera isn't the best way to track down a stolen piece of government property. 2. In anticipation of this becoming a threat due to hackers, etc, all laptops should have a small sliding door that goes over the camera when not in use. 3. The teachers are pervs, that's why the majority of the incidents involves girls.
07:45 PM on 03/01/2010
PERVERTS! It comes down to them being perverts and wanting to spy on teens in hoping they will see them "naughty". I don't care what their excuse is, that is the real reason, they are pigs..
01:02 PM on 03/01/2010
Its ok, if you have nothing to hide you have nothing to worry about [sarc.].
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
rjhuntington
left is right and right is wrong
12:30 PM on 03/01/2010
This is criminal activity. That jerk should be in jail.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
TFlint
10:40 AM on 03/01/2010
There are simple, inexpensive utilities available for download that will alert you if someone is watching. Unfortunately most people who use computers really don't learn how to use them.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
TFlint
10:35 AM on 03/01/2010
No wonder they don't teach Ethics in school. The teachers have no ethics.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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10:01 AM on 03/01/2010
I would be more inclined to see a few of the girls fathers beat the living tar out of the teachers involved. While the teacher is lying in pain, trying to contemplate how to sue the city, give him a kick for me as well.
Creeps and perverts.
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straightuptalker
What ever happened to common sense?
07:11 AM on 03/01/2010
What's scarier is the prediction I made about one year ago that suggested computer manufacturers will resort to installingl these types of spying devices without our knowledge in order to keep track of their users' activities, even in the home. It would be a cinch to accomplish without the "tell-tale" green light warning, and you can bet that some geek tech is working on it at this moment. Once done, it will open the door yet wider for government agencies, as well as nefarious hackers to spy on every individual who owns a pc. Privacy will become a non-issue and laws will be written to remove that aspect of our freedom. It wouldn't surprise me for Homeland Security to broaden the scope and purpose of spying on homeowners, insisting they have the right to invade our privacy to ensure the "protection and safety" of all Americans.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
TFlint
10:34 AM on 03/01/2010
You are paranoid. Why would computer companies pay millions of people to sit around watching millions of people? And what is it that you're doing in front of your computer that nayone would want to care about, anyway?
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FreedomBeforeSecurity
Primary: The only time we truly control our future
02:09 PM on 03/01/2010
What makes you think that the Chinese government isn't doing this already to your iphones and laptops? They already do it to their people (green dam youth escort), what is to stop them from doing it to us?
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Gronkie
Radical Independent
08:19 PM on 03/01/2010
According to these recent events, it seems that anyone with a camera built into their computer has a reason to be paranoid. And the "you shouldn't be worried if you have nothing to hide" argument has long been used to allow authorities to undermine personal, human, and privacy rights. Let me guess, you're a Republican, right?
11:17 PM on 02/28/2010
This is insane i cant believe people are defending the right of these people to spy on children who have done nothing and are in their own homes! There IS a cure for this though its called a LIVE CD!!!! And its what my kids would be using if they had school issued laptops.
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FreedomBeforeSecurity
Primary: The only time we truly control our future
02:10 PM on 03/01/2010
Unless they're netbooks without drives, and they disable the USB ports.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ObamAtomic
05:21 PM on 02/28/2010
Bush signature,Ma Bells involved too.
10:02 AM on 02/28/2010
One step closer to George Orwell's 1984.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
JohnSawyer
arglebargy
04:35 AM on 02/28/2010
I watched the AP Videos linked to below this article, showing the vice principal who showed the webcam photo of Blake Robbins to him. Her statements don't convince me--they appear to be constructed just to deflect responsibility:

"At no point in time did I have the ability to access any webcam through security tracking software": Maybe she didn't, but SOMEONE at the school did. If the camera triggered accidentally, then the school should have thrown away the picture and stayed silent about it, as much as that would have galled them, and then they should have made an announcement to the students and their families, that the school could view whoever was in front of the laptop, if the laptops were used on networks that the school didn't approve, which is one of the clumsy methods the school used to try to determine theft; and to stop lying that the occasional green flash next to the webcam, which many kids were seeing, was just a technical glitch.

"If I believed anyone was spying on either of my children in my home, I too would be outraged.": I commend her on her concern for her own children, but apparently that concern doesn't extend to some children of other parents.

"I find the allegation and implication that I have, or ever would engage, in such conduct, to be offensive, abhorrent, and outrageous.": This is a standard statement that everyone accused of something makes, and has no real value.
12:22 PM on 02/28/2010
Right you are. And I suppose she was wagging her finger when she said it.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
JohnSawyer
arglebargy
05:38 PM on 02/28/2010
I don't remember seeing a wagging finger, but the impression of one was still heavy.

Are you still intending to purchase that second shed, to bring you in line with your epithet?
09:13 PM on 02/27/2010
Did anyone else think of "Frank" from It's Always Sunny in Philidelphia? That "i always like to mess with them (laughs)" quote sounds like something he would say..
And if he were a school administrator he would totally cyberspy and laugh, while waving a gun and drinking wine from a can.
Not that there's anything wrong with wine in a can. I'm not saying he has bad ideas.
04:16 PM on 04/20/2010
Frank wouldn't be defensive about the creepiness of his behavior he'd just think it was fun for him. AND just like wine-stained teeth, the computers' cameras' green lights gave the ruse away.