Author Topic: Students to be tracked at Texas school using micro chips mandatory in name tag.  (Read 418 times)

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

Offline powderman

  • Trade Count: (0)
  • Senior Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 32823
  • Gender: Male
Student-tracking GPS system at Texas schools prompts privacy concerns  By Joshua Rhett Miller
Published September 12, 2012
FoxNews.com     
  •    The card, which will be worn on a lanyard around each student’s neck, will transmit location information via microchip to electronic readers throughout the campuses, NISD spokesman Pascual Gonzalez told FoxNews.com. (Courtesy: NISD)
  A Texas school district's plan to track students with microchips implanted in mandatory IDs has at least one parent charging it's an invasion of his daughter's privacy.
Beginning in the middle of October, roughly 4,200 students at John Jay High School and Anson Jones Middle School in San Antonio will be required to wear the ID cards that utilize radio frequency identification. The card, which will be worn on a lanyard around each student’s neck, will transmit location information via microchip to electronic readers throughout the campuses, Northside Independent School District spokesman Pascual Gonzalez told FoxNews.com.
 
“It is like GPS in the school,” Gonzalez said. “As administrators, we are charged with the safety of students in our schools. So within the four walls of Jay High School and Jones Middle School during the school day, we will always know where those kids are.”
 
The one-year pilot program, which will cost the district $261,000, is also expected
 to increase attendance, and could bring an additional $2 million to the district in state funding as a result, said Gonzalez, adding that the program will be reevaluated next summer.
 
“This allows us to quickly identify if any of those students reported absent are, in fact, in the school,” Gonzalez said in reference to students who may be elsewhere in the building during roll call. “And if they are, we find them, get them to class and report them present.”

 
“This is non-threatening technology. This is not surveillance.”
- NISD spokesman Pascual Gonzalez
Parents have been “supportive” of the new program, Gonzalez said, with the exception of one parent, Steven Hernandez, and his daughter Andrea, both of whom participated in a protest against the technology.
 
“He is the lone protester,” Gonzalez said. “For us, this technology represents an efficient way to locate a student and to always know where our students are in our care.”
Attempts to reach Andrea Hernandez on Wednesday were unsuccessful, but the John Jay sophomore told KSN.com she thinks many students will rebel against the new policy by stashing the ID cards in their lockers.
 
“It makes me uncomfortable,” she told the website. “It’s an invasion of my privacy.”
Hernandez believes the system isn’t necessary because the district already employs digital cameras in all high schools and middle schools. She’s also worried what might happen if the technology gets hacked or misused.
"With a smart phone you can use the option to use your locator, but this I can't turn it off," Hernandez said.
 
Other parents, meanwhile, have indicated they support the new program.
"You never know when a disaster is going to happen and to know where your child is at least you have that card to know where your kid's at all times," Michelle Esquivel told FOX 29.
Another parent, Ernest Castro, said the safety of his child is the utmost importance.
"I'm always worried about my daughter being at school," he told FOX 29.
 
In a letter to parents, John Jay High School administrators assured them that the ID cards will store no personal information and that they’ll work only on school grounds.
 
“Think how important this will be in the case of an emergency,” the letter reads. “In addition, the ‘smart’ student ID card will be used in the breakfast and lunch lines in the cafeteria and to check out books from the library. Because all students will be required to wear their ‘smart’ ID, staff will be able to quickly identify Jay students inside the school.”
 
Despite those assurances, a coalition of privacy and civil liberties organizations and experts have called for a moratorium on the technology, including the American Civil Liberties Union and Liz McIntyre, author of "Spy Chips: How Major Corporations and Government Plan to Track your Every Purchase and Watch Your Every Move."
"These tags are always on," McIntyre told FoxNews.com. "There's no off switch on these things."
 
McIntyre, who began studying the technology in 2002, said she's primarily concerned with the electronic readers getting into the wrong hands or for students to attempt to use them fraudulently, perhaps by leaving them at school while being elsewhere.
 
"We're concerned that students could leave the tags in school and then leave," she said.
In a statement released last month, Dr. Katherine Albrecht, director of Consumers Against Supermarket Privacy Invasion and Numbering, warned against an impending backlash against the technology, which is currently in use only in two public school districts in Texas.
 
“Schools, of all places, should be teaching children how to participate in a free democratic society, not conditioning them to be tracked like cattle," Albrecht's statement read. "Districts planning to use RFID should brace themselves for a parent backlash, protests and lawsuits.”
Gonzalez rejected that criticism, saying the pilot program and the “smart” ID cards have been used successfully in Houston’s Spring Independent School District for at least the past five years.
“This is non-threatening technology,” he said. “This is not surveillance.”

Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/us/2012/09/12/texas-school-district-defends-use-student-tracking-mart-id-card/#ixzz26IvCPhCk
Mr. Charles Glenn “Charlie” Nelson, age 73, of Payneville, KY passed away Thursday, October 14, 2021 at his residence. RIP Charlie, we'll will all miss you. GB

Only half the people leave an abortion clinic alive.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MAiOEV0v2RM
What part of ILLEGAL is so hard to understand???
I learned everything about islam I need to know on 9-11-01.
http://www.thereligionofpeace.com/
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TDqmy1cSqgo
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_u9kieqGppE&feature=related
http://www.illinois.gov/gov/contactthegovernor.cfm

Offline Larry L

  • Trade Count: (0)
  • A Real Regular
  • ****
  • Posts: 780
I'm not sure why this would make a national forum but I can explain the issue....first hand. Yes, the kids will be mandated to wear these microchips. It has their student number on it and nothing else. Unless you have access to NISDs computer system there's no information there for you to steal. I can assure you, unless you have near perfect clearance, you don't have clearance to NISDs main frame. It's very closely guarded as you might expect. The reason these kids will have these tags is that the State of Texas pays the schools according to attendance- not registrations. These tags are going to serve 2 purposes. One, for accurate records to turn into the State for their funding. Two, they'll be able to track truancy. You'd be surprised to know that a lot of the kids check in when attendance is called and then leave. Then the school is held responsible for the brat by the parents. Schools are raising our children in case you haven't been in the system lately. Parents expect the schools to provide everything apparently because parents are too lazy to raise their kids. NISD is far from the first school in Texas to implement this procedure and it's working quite well in other locations.


I forgot to mention, these tags only work on school property or within 200 feet of the receiver. Again, the only info on the chip is the student number that is also unknown to the student or the parent.

Offline Shu

  • Trade Count: (0)
  • Senior Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 1484
Only limited access by people who have clearance and that clearance is very hard to get,
I have heard that line too many times from banks, credit card companies etc. and watch data spillage and theft
 
Perhaps we could let the police monitor this system to ensure its security, oh wait they have a system that only has limited access with people with very stringent clearance requirements. That's right and they leak stuff from systems with the highest of clearance levels.
 
Perhaps we should have the Military look after this system, nothing ever ended up on wiki leaks.
 
Texas may get paid by number of students but this is nothing more than the first step towards big brother monitoring and it will evolve rapidly. You can take to the bank the fact more and more data about each student will be stored and data spillage is no very far away from happening.
 
You can talk about computer security all you want but there is no such thing as a secure computer or secure computer system. The tags transmit radio waves how do you keep them from being intercepted by someone who really wants to read them? Who vetted the monitors of this system? If cell phones and wifi connections can be easily monitored how can you garuntee these chips can't be monitored by other prying eyes?
 
No thank you. I'll pass on this system. You can claim security all you want but it is an invasion of privacy. Start monitoring the kids while they are young, when they are adults it will be no big deal. Why wear a name tag, when this chip can easily be implanted in the back of a hand or on the forehead? Several years from now we can put banking information and other things on this tag so we don't have to carry wallets or purses. We can even pass a law that if you don't have one you can't buy or sell becuase you are obviously illegally here.

Offline hunt-m-up

  • GBO Supporter
  • Trade Count: (27)
  • Senior Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 1122
  • Gender: Male
Why don't they just go ahead and eartag them and get it over with.
So with a portable receiver they could "theoretically" track the kids anywhere in the community then?
Crosman Slingshot, Daisy Red Ryder, dull butter knife

Offline Cuts Crooked

  • Trade Count: (0)
  • Senior Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 3325
  • Gender: Male
Why don't they just go ahead and eartag them and get it over with.
So with a portable receiver they could "theoretically" track the kids anywhere in the community then?

It's Coming! They just gotta take baby steps and get people used to the idea a little bit at a time.
Smokeless is only a passing fad!

"The liar who charms and disarms and wreaths himself in artifice is too agreeable to be called a demon. So we adopt the word "candidate"." Brooke McEldowney

"When a dog has bitten ten kids I have trouble believing he would make a good childs companion just because he now claims he is a good dog and doesn't bite. How's that for a "parable"?"....ME

Offline oldandslow

  • Trade Count: (0)
  • Senior Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 3962
Sure, it's secure.  ;) Whether it is or not it's just another step to the control of all of us by "big brother". What will you do when it's your time to have your chip installed?

Offline powderman

  • Trade Count: (0)
  • Senior Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 32823
  • Gender: Male
Quote
Texas may get paid by number of students but this is nothing more than the first step towards big brother monitoring and it will evolve rapidly. You can take to the bank the fact more and more data about each student will be stored and data spillage is no very far away from happening.

 
YEP, kinda like the camels nose under the tent. POWDERMAN.  >:( >:(
Mr. Charles Glenn “Charlie” Nelson, age 73, of Payneville, KY passed away Thursday, October 14, 2021 at his residence. RIP Charlie, we'll will all miss you. GB

Only half the people leave an abortion clinic alive.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MAiOEV0v2RM
What part of ILLEGAL is so hard to understand???
I learned everything about islam I need to know on 9-11-01.
http://www.thereligionofpeace.com/
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TDqmy1cSqgo
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_u9kieqGppE&feature=related
http://www.illinois.gov/gov/contactthegovernor.cfm

Offline BUGEYE

  • Trade Count: (3)
  • Senior Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 10268
  • Gender: Male
Why don't they just go ahead and eartag them and get it over with.
there ya go,,, it's worked great for cattle for a long time. ;D
Give me liberty, or give me death
                                     Patrick Henry

Give me liberty, or give me death
                                     bugeye

Offline Shu

  • Trade Count: (0)
  • Senior Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 1484
The Peoples Republic of California does not have this but Texas does and people call California the nanny state etc.
Makes you wonder if people will be leaving Texas to live free?