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Do Students
Deserve
Internet Privacy?
"While legislation attempts to protect those
whose privacy is violated, enforcement is
too often challenging. Tens of thousands of
students have their identities at risk, and they
have little protection from hackers."
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As
the FBI battles with Apple about privacy protection and the need for
the technology company to break down computer firewalls, I wonder who
will, exactly, be protected, when technology companies go fishing to
find protected information from their users. It is not so much
that those who use troll cyberspace through their tablets and
telephones, but that it makes sense to understand how much information
is available because some data is too easily available for data
breaches. In other words, that which is perceived as private
isn’t always private. Who has privacy protection?
I am especially concerned that students are vulnerable to data
breaches, and that hackers are able to invade university spaces.
Young people. Who have not yet had the opportunity to establish a
credit identity, are at risk when hackers get into databases that
provide social security numbers, and other protected information.
While legislation attempts to protect those whose privacy is violated,
enforcement is too often challenging. Tens of thousands of
students have their identities at risk, and they have little protection
from hackers.
On February 4, 2016, the University of Florida announced that “as many
as 63,000 current and former students and staff had their names and
social security numbers compromised.” The school has taken steps to
inform those who were affected by the breach, including mailing letters
and launching both a website and a call center. That’s an adequate
first step. Even after the immediate concerns have been addressed in
the wake of this latest hacking incident, underlying issues surrounding
student privacy remain.
In 2015 alone, 182 bills in 46 states were introduced to protect
student privacy. This is both recognition of the problem and indication
of the difficulty in finding a solution. Many of these efforts are
focused on what happens within public schools, funded by taxpayer
dollars, and rightfully so. As a longtime educator and former
university president, I’m all too familiar with many of these issues,
even as new ones emerge every day. Too many students find their
identities compromised because of hacking. Too many spend dozens
of hours (if not more) attempting to protect themselves from
hackers. Identity theft is a real problem, and too many of the
solutions require people to spend more time than they have forging
solutions.
Technology both enables us and shackles us. Our educational
system is enhanced by the software that is becoming more deeply
embedded in our education system on a daily basis. At the same
time, this software may provide an extraordinary access to student
data. How do we balance privacy concerns with access to
data? One advocacy group found that “school-issued Google Chrome
books upload private student data to the cloud by default, including
web history. Chrome books also track students on school-assigned
accounts when they navigate to Google-owned services that aren’t
segregated as ‘educational’ (non-‘educational’ products include Google
Maps, Google Books, and YouTube).”
Student privacy protections are also important for after school
programs. Largely unreported on by the media, the student test
preparation company The Princeton Review was purchased last year by The
Match Group, an online dating umbrella company that owns the hookup app
Tinder, as well as Match.com, OkCupid and dozens of other online dating
websites. Online dating sites are notorious for their failure to
protect user data – according to the Electronic Frontier Foundation,
“Your profile is indexed by Google. While this isn’t the case for every
online dating site, OkCupid profiles are public by default and indexed
by Google. … Even something as small as a unique turn of phrase could
show up in search results and bring casual visitors to your page. …
last October researcher Jonathan Mayer discovered that OkCupid was
actually leaking personal data to some of its marketing partners.”
Do our students have any privacy as they troll the Internet, visit
dating sites, and offer more information than they want others to
know? As we have conversations about privacy, have we focused on
the young person who is most vulnerable to a pernicious information
sharing that puts young people at risk? A loose patchwork of
regulations exists to protect student privacy in the United States, and
little oversight of private company interactions exists at either the
state or federal levels. This is especially true of data sharing
between first parties, as both Tinder and Princeton Review are
designated under their joint ownership. Rules have been proposed in the
past that would “prevent separate businesses owned by the same company
from both being considered ‘first parties’ and thus being able to
freely share information with each other,” but little has actually been
done.
Conversations about privacy do not often, unfortunately, focus on
students and their special vulnerability. Yet, as we grapple with
technology challenges, students are among those who will require
special attention . From capital buildings to courtrooms to
classrooms, privacy issues are going to loom large in this modern age
of technology. Even as we enable students to use technology to
enhance their possibilities, so must we also encourage them to use
technology to manage their future options?
Legislators have focused on privacy issues, but they have been remiss
when they have refused to deal with the privacy rights that students
have. Too many data companies have too much access to
student data. Too many who are concerned with justice issues must
raise legitimate questions about the rights of our students, especially
minors who can be more easily targeted in data mining operations.
While there are appropriate conversations about privacy rights for
adults, there must also be conversations about the privacy needs of
young people and students. Cyberspace isn’t always the safest
space. If the law will protect the privacy of adults, it must do
so much more to protect the privacy of minors.
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BC Editorial Board Member Dr. Julianne Malveaux, PhD (JulianneMalveaux.com)
is the Honorary Co-Chair of the Social Action Commission of Delta Sigma
Theta Sorority, Incorporated and serves on the boards of the Economic
Policy Institute as well as The Recreation Wish List Committee of
Washington, DC. A native San Franciscan, she is the President and
owner of Economic Education a 501 c-3 non-profit headquartered in
Washington, D.C. During her time as the 15th President of Bennett
College for Women, Dr. Malveaux was the architect of exciting and
innovative transformation at America’s oldest historically black
college for women. Contact Dr. Malveaux and BC. |
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is published every Thursday |
Executive Editor:
David A. Love, JD |
Managing Editor:
Nancy Littlefield, MBA |
Publisher:
Peter Gamble |
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