Anonymous ID: c8dd36 May 1, 2022, 4:35 p.m. No.16191862   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>1874 >>1901 >>2175

Shocked Tennessee family visiting Disney World discovers an Apple AirTag tracking their 17-year-old daughter's movements for four hours: Teen encourages people to change their phone settings so they can detect the devices

 

The Gaston family were on a day trip to Magic Kingdom upon making the discovery

Maddison, 17, and her mother, Jennifer, only found out about the AirTag four hours after they were first initially tracked

They went back to the theme park's parking lot before searching their car for the device, but to no avail

Madison continued to monitor the device's location on her iPhone through the remainder of the day

The mother and daughter alerted local police but still don't know the gadget's owner

Hundreds of women across the U.S. have reported receiving notifications of AirTags that they do not own 'moving' with them and recording their every move

The devices can easily be hidden and report its movement to its owner's iPhone

 

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-10773009/Tennessee-family-visiting-Disney-world-discovered-unknown-Apple-AirTag-used-track-teen-daughter.html

Anonymous ID: c8dd36 May 1, 2022, 4:52 p.m. No.16192017   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>2175 >>2214 >>2290

Headcounts are down at public schools. Now budgets are too.

 

MISSION, Kan. (AP) — A school system in suburban Kansas City is eliminating over 100 jobs, including kindergarten aides and library clerks. Oakland, California, is closing seven schools. Other districts around the country are merging classrooms, selling buildings and leaving teaching positions unfilled in order to close budget gaps.

Public school systems are beginning to feel the pinch from enrollment losses tied to the coronavirus pandemic.

Money for schools is driven partly by student headcounts, andemergency provisions in many states allowed schools to maintain funding at pre-pandemic levels.But like the billions of dollars of federal relief money that have helped schools weather the crisis, those measures were not meant to last forever.

In Olathe, Kansas, where the school system is cutting 140 jobs, Deputy Superintendent John Hutchison said the extra federal money merely put off the inevitable.

Now it is trimming millions of dollars from its budgets because enrollment, having peaked at more than 30,000 students in fall 2019, fell by around 900 in the first full school year of the pandemic. Less than 100 of those students have returned.

 

https://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2022/apr/30/headcounts-are-down-at-public-schools-now-budgets-/