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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsHAL: "This mission is too important for me to allow you to jeopardize it."
New York high school will use CCTV and facial recognition to enforce discipline
Next year, high schools in Lockport New York will use the Aegis CCTV and facial recognition system to track and record the interactions of students suspected of code of conduct violations, keeping a ledger of who speaks to whom, where, and for how long.
The record will be used to assemble evidence against students and identify possible accomplices to ascribe guilt to.
Lockport Superintendent Michelle T. Bradley justified the decision by noting, We always have to be on our guard. We cant let our guard down.
Lockport will be the first school district in the world to subject its students to this kind of surveillance. The program will cost $1.4m in state money. The technology supplier is SN Technologies of Ganonoque, Ont., one of the companies in the vicinity of Kingston, Ontario, home to the majority of the provinces detention centers.
The Lockport district says that the system will make students safer by alerting officials if someone on a sex-offender registry or terrorist watchlist enters the property. None of Americas school shootings or high-profile serial sex abuse scandals were carried out by wanted terrorists or people on the sex-offender registry.
Deployed law-enforcement facial recognition systems have failure rates of 98%. The vendor responsible for Aegis would not disclose how they improved on the state of the art, but insisted that their product worked 99.97% of the time. The spokesperson would not disclose any of the workings of the system, seemingly believing that doing so was antithetical to security.
The consultant who advised Lockport to spend $1.4m on the Aegis system, Tony Olivo, is listed as a partner of the vendor receiving the $1.4m in tax money; according to Lockport Superintendent Michelle T. Bradley, Olivo did not ask to be paid by the school district for this advice. Olivo says he also isnt being paid a commission by the Aegis vendor. Olivo also consults for the nearby Depew school system, which is also committed to purchasing Aegis with tax money. Despite refusing to disclose any technical details about Aegis, Olivo said, There is nothing in the world that can do what this technology does.
https://boingboing.net/2018/05/21/kafka-high.html
Next year, high schools in Lockport New York will use the Aegis CCTV and facial recognition system to track and record the interactions of students suspected of code of conduct violations, keeping a ledger of who speaks to whom, where, and for how long.
The record will be used to assemble evidence against students and identify possible accomplices to ascribe guilt to.
Lockport Superintendent Michelle T. Bradley justified the decision by noting, We always have to be on our guard. We cant let our guard down.
Lockport will be the first school district in the world to subject its students to this kind of surveillance. The program will cost $1.4m in state money. The technology supplier is SN Technologies of Ganonoque, Ont., one of the companies in the vicinity of Kingston, Ontario, home to the majority of the provinces detention centers.
The Lockport district says that the system will make students safer by alerting officials if someone on a sex-offender registry or terrorist watchlist enters the property. None of Americas school shootings or high-profile serial sex abuse scandals were carried out by wanted terrorists or people on the sex-offender registry.
Deployed law-enforcement facial recognition systems have failure rates of 98%. The vendor responsible for Aegis would not disclose how they improved on the state of the art, but insisted that their product worked 99.97% of the time. The spokesperson would not disclose any of the workings of the system, seemingly believing that doing so was antithetical to security.
The consultant who advised Lockport to spend $1.4m on the Aegis system, Tony Olivo, is listed as a partner of the vendor receiving the $1.4m in tax money; according to Lockport Superintendent Michelle T. Bradley, Olivo did not ask to be paid by the school district for this advice. Olivo says he also isnt being paid a commission by the Aegis vendor. Olivo also consults for the nearby Depew school system, which is also committed to purchasing Aegis with tax money. Despite refusing to disclose any technical details about Aegis, Olivo said, There is nothing in the world that can do what this technology does.
https://boingboing.net/2018/05/21/kafka-high.html
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HAL: "This mission is too important for me to allow you to jeopardize it." (Original Post)
MrScorpio
May 2018
OP
The Velveteen Ocelot
(115,674 posts)1. That's creepy as hell.
oswaldactedalone
(3,490 posts)2. You don't mind talking about it
do you, Dave?