Your Papers, Please...

John/az2

New member
The site:
http://www.worldnetdaily.com/bluesky_exnews/19990922_xex_louisiana_hi.shtml

The article:
<BLOCKQUOTE><font size="1" face="Verdana, Arial">quote:</font><HR>YOUR PAPERS, PLEASE...
Louisiana high school
tags students
Security's the reason,
but privacy activists don't like it

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

By Stephan Archer
© 1999 WorldNetDaily.com

In an effort to tighten up security during school hours, administrators at Ruston High School in Ruston, La., have issued a policy that requires both students and faculty to wear identification badges complete with photograph, name and Social Security numbers encrypted at the bottom.
According to Charles Scriber, principal at the high school, cafeteria workers, custodians and administrators must wear them as well.

"It's like a name tag when you go to a conference," Scriber said of the badges. "On a campus such as ours that is fairly open from all sides, we want to be able to identify our students. It would be very possible for students (from other schools) to come on campus and get among our students, and we would not be able to identify them until some time later. But with the badge, at a glance, we can see if they are ours or if they are not ours."

WorldNetDaily had reported earlier on a similar policy in Elkins, W.Va., where a teacher and a small group of students and parents protested their school's identification program on religious grounds.

Besides being used for identification purposes, the badges are used by the students in the cafeteria and the library. It functions much like other ID cards carried by students with the difference being that this card has to be visible at all times during the students' or faculty members' time on campus.

The Social Security number at the bottom of the card has been encrypted into a bar code, but according to Scriber, if the students feel uncomfortable with the bar code, they can either cover it up or have it removed. Even though the student body at the school has this option, some privacy advocates are concerned that forcing the more than 1,200 students to wear the badges may be little more than a conditioning to accept the idea of having less privacy.

"I think it's a conditioning," said Lisa Dean, vice president for technology policy at Free Congress Foundation. "The whole issue of national ID is really at the center here."

Dean is referring to the national identification card which was first reported by WorldNetDaily. The national ID card is the brainchild of the 1996 Illegal Immigration Reform and Immigrant Responsibility Act, which requires, in part, that all states make their driver's licenses comply with certain guidelines including the use of the Social Security number and other digitized biometric information such as fingerprints, retina scans and DNA prints.

But does Ruston High School policy violate the privacy of its students? Solveig Singleton, director of information studies at the CATO Institute, doesn't think so.

"I don't think the Federal Privacy Act would be applied to a locally administered school," Singleton said. "You might be able to make an argument there because the Social Security number is involved -- it is federal -- but generally, I think the regulation of the schools would be left to the state."

Singleton expressed concern, however, that from a philosophical point of view, the identification badge is very disturbing.

"Once you create that kind of identifier, it just spreads throughout every day life and pretty soon, you can't walk down the street without it. That's an extreme example, but I think that's the serious issue here," said Singleton.

Dean agrees with Singleton that the school is, in essence, creating a trend that could very easily spread to other aspects of American society.

"Sooner or later, you're going to have a national identity card, and it will start in the high schools conditioning a generation of Americans to say that a national identity card is not only useful and convenient but necessary," said Dean. "That's the real privacy violation."

"Things tend to start out small, but they end up getting larger. This is no exception," Dean added.

Scriber told WorldNetDaily he got a legal opinion from one of the school's attorneys giving him the go ahead on the policy. He had looked at the Social Security Act as well and nowhere did he find any language pertaining to the use of Social Security numbers in encrypted codes. Nevertheless, at least one parent and two students have already complained about the policy.

Scriber insists the new policy will help to achieve the school's goal of tighter security. Being able to identify a student and call them by name is a tremendous advantage, Scriber pointed out. Scriber said he has also noticed a difference in the students' behavior as it makes them feel more responsible.

According to unverified reports which the principal himself had heard about, one student has been able to decipher the encryption. However, the principal doesn't believe this poses a security threat to students since it takes the student a long time to decipher a code. In most instances, the student wouldn't have time to decode the encryption unless another student let him.

Commenting on the school's policy, Marc Rotenberg, director of the Electronic Privacy Information Center, said, "I think it's a terrible idea to be treating high school students like they're prison inmates. I don't think the need has been established. I think it's significant that even at Columbine where they had a terrible tragedy, parents resisted a lot of the proposals for very invasive monitoring and police presence at the high school."

Analyzing the policy as to how it relates to high school students, Dean said policies such as these start with harmless bits of information on a card. The student is led to believe the card is a good idea when trips through cafeteria lines and book checkouts in the library go faster. Thus, they readily accept the card policies without even considering what may be coming down the road.

"That's generally how these things start," said Dean. "It's a convenience or an efficiency and so on ... Before you know it, the frog is boiling.
[/quote]

Emphasis mine.

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John/az

"The middle of the road between the extremes of good and evil, is evil. When freedom is at stake, your silence is not golden, it's yellow..." RKBA!

www.quixtar.com
referal #2005932
 
Most likely, the PLEASE will quite soon, become a thing of the past, as is likely the case with "privacy" or what passes therefore.
 
If my kids went to that school - well - they wouldnt be anymore.

Didn't we tell ourselves not to put our kids names on there clothes for fear of some one leading them into a strangers waiting van by calling there name?

Now it is required to wear you name on a tag?
With SS#?

Buncha idiots...

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"There is no limit to stupidity. Space itself is said to be bounded by its own curvature, but stupidity continues beyond infinity."
RAGE AGAINST THE MACHINE
The Critic formerly known as Kodiac
 
The use of ID cards *within* a school may be new, but not school ID
cards themselves.

School year 1955-56, Millcreek Jr High School, Erie County, PA.
We were issued bus passes, with our picture and bus number on the
pass, so we could not accidentally or intentionally ride the “wrong” bus.
No pass = no ride. Many of us frequently were stranded - even when the
bus driver knew us by name. Recall the “lake effect” weather along Lake
Erie.

- You could not stay at school.
- You could not ride your own bus without a pass.
- If your parents went out of town and you were staying with friends or
relatives, you could not ride a school bus that took you to their home,
even at the parents’ written request.

Many children were forced to walk along streets, roads, and highways -
susceptible to weather, traffic, and violence.

This “smooth and orderly” system finally resulted in several deaths - one
was the rape, torture, and murder of a young girl - so I guess the “system”
was served. (Yes. I’m still angry.)

[This message has been edited by Dennis (edited September 24, 1999).]
 
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