Anonymous ID: 2d0ee1 Dec. 25, 2019, 4:52 p.m. No.7620741   ๐Ÿ—„๏ธ.is ๐Ÿ”—kun   >>0754 >>0780 >>0787 >>0966 >>1218 >>1284 >>1372

This is pretty creepy.

 

Colleges Are Turning Students' Phones Into Surveillance Machines, Tracking the Locations of Hundreds of Thousands

Colleges are tracking students' location to enforce attendance, analyze their behavior and assess their mental health. One company calculates a student's "risk score" based on factors such as whether she is going to the library enough. Washington Post reports: When Syracuse University freshmen walk into professor Jeff Rubin's Introduction to Information Technologies class, seven small Bluetooth beacons hidden around the Grant Auditorium lecture hall connect with an app on their smartphones and boost their "attendance points." And when they skip class? The SpotterEDU app sees that, too, logging their absence into a campus database that tracks them over time and can sink their grade. It also alerts Rubin, who later contacts students to ask where they've been. His 340-person lecture has never been so full. "They want those points," he said. "They know I'm watching and acting on it. So, behaviorally, they change." Short-range phone sensors and campuswide WiFi networks are empowering colleges across the United States to track hundreds of thousands of students more precisely than ever before. Dozens of schools now use such technology to monitor students' academic performance, analyze their conduct or assess their mental health. But some professors and education advocates argue that the systems represent a new low in intrusive technology, breaching students' privacy on a massive scale. The tracking systems, they worry, will infantilize students in the very place where they're expected to grow into adults, further training them to see surveillance as a normal part of living, whether they like it or not. "We're adults. Do we really need to be tracked?" said Robby Pfeifer, a sophomore at Virginia Commonwealth University in Richmond, which recently began logging the attendance of students connected to the campus' WiFi network. "Why is this necessary? How does this benefit us? โ€ฆ And is it just going to keep progressing until we're micromanaged every second of the day?" This style of surveillance has become just another fact of life for many Americans. A flood of cameras, sensors and microphones, wired to an online backbone, now can measure people's activity and whereabouts with striking precision, reducing the mess of everyday living into trend lines that companies promise to help optimize.

 

Link to WaPo article within the referenced slashdot summary article

https://yro.slashdot.org/story/19/12/25/2230218/colleges-are-turning-students-phones-into-surveillance-machines-tracking-the-locations-of-hundreds-of-thousands

Anonymous ID: 2d0ee1 Dec. 25, 2019, 5:05 p.m. No.7620835   ๐Ÿ—„๏ธ.is ๐Ÿ”—kun   >>0846 >>0966 >>1218 >>1262 >>1372

Russia 'Successfully Tests' Its Unplugged Internet

https://yro.slashdot.org/story/19/12/24/2153208/russia-successfully-tests-its-unplugged-internet

 

The Russian government says it has successfully tested a country-wide alternative to the global internet. Details of what the test involved were vague but, according to the Ministry of Communications, ordinary users did not notice any changes. The results will now be presented to President Putin. The BBC reports: The initiative involves restricting the points at which Russia's version of the net connects to its global counterpart, giving the government more control over what its citizens can access. "Sadly, the Russian direction of travel is just another step in the increasing breaking-up of the internet," said Prof Alan Woodward, a computer scientist at the University of Surrey. "That would effectively get ISPs [internet service providers] and telcos to configure the internet within their borders as a gigantic intranet, just like a large corporation does," explained Prof Woodward. "The Russian government has run into technical challenges in the past when trying to increase online control, such as its largely unsuccessful efforts to block Russians from accessing encrypted messaging app Telegram," Justin Sherman, a cyber-security policy fellow at the New America think tank, told the BBC. "Without more information about this test though, it's hard to assess exactly how far Russia has progressed in the path towards an isolatable domestic internet. "And on the business front, it remains to be seen just how much domestic and foreign pushback Russia will get."

Anonymous ID: 2d0ee1 Dec. 25, 2019, 5:39 p.m. No.7621032   ๐Ÿ—„๏ธ.is ๐Ÿ”—kun   >>1049

>>7621023

>>7621002

Spouseanon pointed out to me today that the Baltic Freight Index is dropping at this time, because shippers/retailers loaded up on inventory in anticipation of China tariffs โ€ฆ now they're waiting to see if tariffs get lowered before adding more inventory.

Reconcile?

Anonymous ID: 2d0ee1 Dec. 25, 2019, 6:04 p.m. No.7621162   ๐Ÿ—„๏ธ.is ๐Ÿ”—kun

>>7621070

I didn't pay that much attention, other than the dead man being ex-husband of Norwegian princess & father of her 3 children?

 

1) What's relationship between Spacey & victim?

2) Would victim have had opportunity to know bad things about Spacey?

3) How did victim die? Any foul play suspected?

 

We don't believe in coincidences around here.

Sorry for not paying attention to the story as anons posted it all day โ€ฆ I tend to pay more attention to memefarming.