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Schools Scanned Students' Irises Without Permission

schwit1 writes "Parents in Polk County, Florida are outraged after learning that students in area schools had their irises scanned as part of a new security program without obtaining proper permission. Two days before their Memorial Day weekend break, kids from at least three different public schools — Bethune Academy (K–5), Davenport School of the Arts (K–5, middle, and high school), and Daniel Jenkins Academy (grades 6–12) — were subjected to iris scans without their parents' knowledge or consent. The scans are essentially optical fingerprints, which the school intended to collect to create a database of biometric information for school-bus security."

342 comments

  1. s/Freedom/Security/g by Gothmolly · · Score: 5, Insightful

    You'll lose both, and deserve neither.

    --
    I want to delete my account but Slashdot doesn't allow it.
    1. Re:s/Freedom/Security/g by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What happened to "information wants to be free"? Ultimately we're talking about photos here.

    2. Re:s/Freedom/Security/g by Artraze · · Score: 2

      Their iris patterns weren't "information" until they were scanned.

    3. Re:s/Freedom/Security/g by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      OK, that is ridiculous. That would be like saying "If you write something down, it is not information until it is scanned and converted to machine searchable data". However, we all know that is not true. It is information from the moment I write it down. You just can't access it easily without getting a glimpse of the paper. Just like you can't easily access the information points of my iris until it is scanned and you hack the database. But it is still information. Just in a form that is nearly impossible to access - just like my written page of paper.

    4. Re:s/Freedom/Security/g by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      You'll lose both, and deserve neither.

      The dead horse is starting to stink. keep beating, though, if it makes you happy.

      We are a police state in the US now. The excuses are terrorism, drugs, child porn, whatever - and there's a loud minority of people who want that shit and a silent majority who just grumble on the rare occasions when it bothers them - like having their nail file being confiscated at the TSA checkpoint.

      Those of us who saw it coming have lost. There is nothing to do now except wait for the day that it gets so bad - if ever - that regular people start pressuring their politicians to put the cat back in the bag. I have given up. I point and say, "This is where we are headed!" and I get the look of a cow chewing in its cud.

      John Q. Public is worried about his job and his standard of living. He has his big screen TV for his football games that he got on sale for $799 and is estatic but there's this niggling feeling that he's getting poorer. His salary hasn't gone down but he's feels poorer. More money comes out of his pocket for health care, groceries cost a bit more, and it costs $30 more to fill his tank - even though there's an oil boom in the US right now.

      And we expect him to care about about some pissant Florida town that's scanning the irises of kids eyes for "security".

    5. Re:s/Freedom/Security/g by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      _Everything_ is information. Haven't you tried Lisp?

    6. Re:s/Freedom/Security/g by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Information doesn't want to be free. People want information to be free.

    7. Re:s/Freedom/Security/g by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You'll lose both, and deserve neither.

      Thing is, this is one rare case where it was not simply the paranoid parents voting for a new security feature. This was done without parents' knowledge.

    8. Re:s/Freedom/Security/g by Hoi+Polloi · · Score: 1

      People never seem to learn that security requires people buying into it. If you shove it on them it will fail.

      --
      It is by the juice of the coffee bean that thoughts acquire speed, the teeth acquire stains. The stains become a warning
    9. Re:s/Freedom/Security/g by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      even though there's an oil boom in the US right now.

      Oil is not a local industry. Prices are international -- just like software is not cheaper in Silicon Valley.

    10. Re:s/Freedom/Security/g by wagnerrp · · Score: 1

      It's not like you use an image of your iris or fingers to match against in a biometric scan. You have a program that algorithmically breaks the image down into a few key geometries features, so it can more easily be used in a fuzzy comparison during a scan. The information doesn't exist until you scan and process it.

    11. Re:s/Freedom/Security/g by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

      Don't anthropomorphize information.

      It hates it when you do that.

    12. Re:s/Freedom/Security/g by ColdWetDog · · Score: 5, Interesting

      We're not really talking about security hear. We're talking about control.

      It's a subtly difference concept.

      --
      Faster! Faster! Faster would be better!
    13. Re:s/Freedom/Security/g by Salgak1 · · Score: 1

      You'll lose both, and deserve neither.

      Thing is, this is one rare case where it was not simply the paranoid parents voting for a new security feature. This was done without parents' knowledge.

      Yes, but it didn't happen in a vacuum. The terrorists/drug cartels/merchants of fear du jour have scared enough sheep that they've bleated to their shepherds, who have, in their self-defined benevolent wisdom, decided to do this for our safety/for the children/to stop the monster du jour.

      The Security State is fueled by teh Burning Stoopid. . . .

    14. Re:s/Freedom/Security/g by jythie · · Score: 1

      I think in this case neither is on the table. Someone got to buy cool but useless tech. This is more of a case of someone using taxpayer money to make it look like they were 'thinking of the childrens' without actually having any actual effect.

    15. Re:s/Freedom/Security/g by gorzek · · Score: 1

      lolwut

      Is encrypted data just gibberish until it's decrypted, at which point it becomes information? No, it was always information, it was just hidden or impractical to get at without the right tools.

      Same with human iris patterns. It's been information all along, it just wasn't easy or cheap to extract.

      You'd have to be working with a definition of "information" so narrow as to be useless.

    16. Re:s/Freedom/Security/g by noh8rz10 · · Score: 1

      there's a natural gas boom, not an oil boom. fuel is still sky high. it costs me $60 to fill my tank and I buy 2 tanks a week.

    17. Re:s/Freedom/Security/g by alen · · Score: 3, Interesting

      is he any worse than Jon Q geek rooting his phone every night and downloading new ROM's for no reason?

    18. Re:s/Freedom/Security/g by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      is he any worse than Jon Q geek rooting his phone every night and downloading new ROM's for no reason?

      Well, yes he is, because we're Jon Q Geek, and we have a crippling inferiority complex that needs constant stroking. Who cares about everyone else?

    19. Re:s/Freedom/Security/g by mjwalshe · · Score: 1

      And I bet the Headmaster went on a few nice jollies before he or she signed the contract - that is the problem with decentralizing every thing much easier to bribe individual schools/towns as there is no effective oversight.

      I bet that Headmaster who over saw that spying on underage kids via laptop cameras is still working - In the UK he woudl have been sacked and banned from ever working with Children and Vunerable adults again (this is the opinion of two head governors that i know)

    20. Re:s/Freedom/Security/g by camperdave · · Score: 1

      It is the responsibility of all good citizens to actively prevent the slide into a police state. Once that becomes unavoidable, it is the responsibility of all good citizens to end the police state as quickly as possible. If you believe that you are in a police state, then now is not the time to wait for the day that it gets so bad. Now is the time to make it that bad.

      --
      When our name is on the back of your car, we're behind you all the way!
    21. Re:s/Freedom/Security/g by cusco · · Score: 5, Informative

      Actually we're talking about neither, in this case. I work in the physical security industry, and have worked with iris scanners. They're actually one of the better biometric systems out there, EXCEPT that unlike fingerprints iris patterns change as children are growing. This is a rather inappropriate use of a technology developed for use on adults who have a (relatively) stable iris pattern. It's a ridiculously inappropriate application of a technology developed for two-factor authentication, since it's going to be used in place of the current proximity cards. Biometric technologies should not be used alone, they're too undependable.

      --
      "Think about how stupid the average person is. Now, realise that half of them are dumber than that." - George Carlin
    22. Re:s/Freedom/Security/g by compro01 · · Score: 1

      If you think your prices are sky high, our prices must be in geostationary orbit. Or maybe out at the L2 point.

      --
      upon the advice of my lawyer, i have no sig at this time
    23. Re:s/Freedom/Security/g by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

      "Once that becomes unavoidable..."

      It has.

      "...it is the responsibility of all good citizens to end the police state as quickly as possible."

      Just keep in mind that the only real job of any revolutionary is to make the state worse. To do little things that the state will over-react to by clamping down hard on every one and every thing. This gets more and more cud-chewers pissed off, and turns them into revolutionaries as well.

      Because no revolution succeeds until the revolutionaries outnumber the revolted-against in numbers sufficient to overcome any advantage in weaponry.

    24. Re:s/Freedom/Security/g by Dishevel · · Score: 4, Insightful

      You know what would keep children REALLY safe?
      Put POV cameras on everyone in the world. Have all of that accessible to law enforcement.
      Now the children will be safe. Put yours on first.

      --
      Why is it so hard to only have politicians for a few years, then have them go away?
    25. Re:s/Freedom/Security/g by fizzer06 · · Score: 1

      Can you explain exactly HOW " it will be used to keep children safe"?

    26. Re:s/Freedom/Security/g by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You'd have to be working with a definition of "information" so narrow as to be useless.

      Hey, thanks for the information!

    27. Re: s/Freedom/Security/g by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Iris is not data, it is nature. Someone came up with a way to measure some points to uniquely identify iris, but before that data is collected it does not exist. For example, a tree leaf, is It data? You can probably measure a leaf in gazillion ways, does that mean that a leaf contains gazillion of data points? Sorry, that does not compute.

    28. Re:s/Freedom/Security/g by Bartles · · Score: 1

      Keep telling yourself that. When a squirrel immolates itself on a transformer at a refinery in Texas and shuts it down, why do international prices increase?

    29. Re:s/Freedom/Security/g by Blaskowicz · · Score: 3, Interesting

      It was information completely unknown to anyone before scanning, unless someone already took high res close up pictures of children's irises. That is very unlikely.
      Do you know the precise temperature (down to 0.001K) and composition at a sub-millimetric scale of all matter in a 100km radius around the center of Jupiter?
      I bet you don't. Nor do I know what my own iris patterns are.

    30. Re:s/Freedom/Security/g by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Better to beg forgiveness than to ask permission?

    31. Re:s/Freedom/Security/g by Ultra64 · · Score: 2

      I think you forgot to add "WAKE UP, SHEEPLE!"

    32. Re:s/Freedom/Security/g by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I was waiting for the "if these students were in a public place, they had no rights to privacy / not being iris scanned / fingerprinted / terahertz scanned" argument, myself.

    33. Re:s/Freedom/Security/g by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If it's really for "no reason", you're correct.
      If it's so his main source of communication better protects his privacy and freedom, then Jon Q geek is better.

    34. Re:s/Freedom/Security/g by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why would you root it every night instead of just once?

    35. Re:s/Freedom/Security/g by noh8rz10 · · Score: 0

      you mean my google glass? everybody on slashdot gets a woodie when talking about google glass, so I assume you're not being sarcastic.

    36. Re:s/Freedom/Security/g by Jockle · · Score: 1

      and there's a loud minority of people who want that shit and a silent majority who just grumble on the rare occasions when it bothers them

      Actually, I'd say a majority support much of this nonsense.

    37. Re:s/Freedom/Security/g by noh8rz10 · · Score: 0

      well you could imagine terrorists targeting a schoolbus, for example

    38. Re:s/Freedom/Security/g by noh8rz10 · · Score: 1

      I assume "you" is the US, but who is "we"? btw I'm in California and I pay $4/gallon. per the pedantry on the metrics article, I'm referring to US gallons which are 3.79 liter.

    39. Re:s/Freedom/Security/g by Aryden · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Whether you think the program is good or bad is irrelevant. The issue at hand is, they did this to minors without permission from the parents or notification to them.

      But seriously though, why would you need iris scans of kids? Their reasoning is to track the students getting on and off the buses, replacing the identification cards that they students carry now. Oh wait, ALL of the kids had the scans done. What about the kids that do not ride the buses, the ones that walk or have parents/guardians pick them up and drop them off everyday. Not only are they invading the privacy by collecting personal information from a minor without consent, but they are removing a valuable lesson in responsibility, as well as collecting this data for people that will not or do not use the system at all.

      What's more, the article says that all of the students went through the program, but you're telling me that there were no students at all that objected? I find it hard to believe that there were high school students involved and no one said "no".

      How are you going to react when the police come door to door installing biometric scanners and requiring you to scan in/out each time you leave the house, walk into/out of a building, get into/out of your car?

    40. Re:s/Freedom/Security/g by Aryden · · Score: 1

      Your google glass is accessible to you and to those you personally give permission to, there is no difference between that and your cell phone. And not everyone gets a woody when talking about glass.

    41. Re:s/Freedom/Security/g by Aryden · · Score: 1

      you need some fuel efficiency in your life.

    42. Re:s/Freedom/Security/g by KingMotley · · Score: 1

      No, but I can guess what the color and smell of all matter in a 100nm radius around ur anus.

    43. Re:s/Freedom/Security/g by Dishevel · · Score: 2

      I did not know that Google Glass was set up to forward everything all the time to the Feds.
      or ...
      Are you a bit tarded?

      --
      Why is it so hard to only have politicians for a few years, then have them go away?
    44. Re:s/Freedom/Security/g by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 1

      "The dead horse is starting to stink. keep beating, though, if it makes you happy... We are a police state in the US now... "

      And we expect him to care about about some pissant Florida town that's scanning the irises of kids eyes for "security".

      Goddamn right we do. Not caring is how it got this bad in the first place. Remember The Matrix? It's getting to the point that if they aren't on the bandwagon of freedom today, they're part of the problem.

      Things may not be so far gone that they're actually "the enemy" yet, but if this keeps up...

    45. Re:s/Freedom/Security/g by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 0

      "Now is the time to make it that bad."

      Not to disagree with your point, but I would have said, "If you believe that you are in a police state, then it already *IS* that bad. Now is the time to make it better."

    46. Re:s/Freedom/Security/g by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 1

      Or maybe "Shake up, weeple!"

    47. Re:s/Freedom/Security/g by noh8rz10 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      it forwards everything to google for cataloging and crossreferenicng and advertising. then feds get a warrant and its game over for privacy, as the brits say.

    48. Re:s/Freedom/Security/g by g0bshiTe · · Score: 1

      Replace iris scan with taking a dna sample from the kids.

      As a parent would you be so cavalier about it then?

      After all it's just a little spit.

      --
      I am Bennett Haselton! I am Bennett Haselton!
    49. Re:s/Freedom/Security/g by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 1

      "People never seem to learn that security requires people buying into it. If you shove it on them it will fail."

      Not even that. Because you can't shove it on them. Real security cannot come from government. Pick up any history book. It never has, and it never will.

      The only true security comes through freedom of The People. It trickles up, not down.

    50. Re:s/Freedom/Security/g by g0bshiTe · · Score: 1

      How would any child be safer having a retina scan?

      Are they going to put retina scanners in the school or on buses to authenticate children?

      Is a retina scan going to keep a child from bringing a weapon to school?

      How many hundreds of years have there been learning institutions without retina scans, and they are as safe today as they've ever been.

      --
      I am Bennett Haselton! I am Bennett Haselton!
    51. Re:s/Freedom/Security/g by g0bshiTe · · Score: 1

      It will stop Bobby Profile from stealing Timmy Perkins lunch money by claiming he is Timmy.

      "Sorry Bobby, retina scan says you're not Timmy".

      --
      I am Bennett Haselton! I am Bennett Haselton!
    52. Re:s/Freedom/Security/g by g0bshiTe · · Score: 1

      Yes cause a grown adult riding a school bus with children isn't obvious enough.

      --
      I am Bennett Haselton! I am Bennett Haselton!
    53. Re:s/Freedom/Security/g by g0bshiTe · · Score: 1

      BAZINGA!

      --
      I am Bennett Haselton! I am Bennett Haselton!
    54. Re:s/Freedom/Security/g by g0bshiTe · · Score: 1

      Though in doing so one would be acting in a purely patriotic manner you would surely be labeled a terrorist and prosecuted as such.

      --
      I am Bennett Haselton! I am Bennett Haselton!
    55. Re:s/Freedom/Security/g by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That entire post hurt my eyes. Please get a grammar checker.

    56. Re:s/Freedom/Security/g by Richy_T · · Score: 1

      Yes. Much better to centralize everything. Then we can have something like the TSA.

    57. Re:s/Freedom/Security/g by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your brain is information, though clearly of little value. Let's remove it to turn it into information and verify,

    58. Re:s/Freedom/Security/g by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      umm... didn't you just agree with him in your argument????

    59. Re:s/Freedom/Security/g by Dishevel · · Score: 0

      So then, Yes.
      You are retarded.

      --
      Why is it so hard to only have politicians for a few years, then have them go away?
    60. Re:s/Freedom/Security/g by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not a single teacher thought "hey, I was told this is for the children's safety, but something about this doesn't seem right"?

    61. Re:s/Freedom/Security/g by zlives · · Score: 1

      >How would any child be safer having a retina scan?
      a terrorist could be disguised as a child, but retina authentication will sound the alarm!?
      >Are they going to put retina scanners in the school or on buses to authenticate children?
      yes, also in lunch boxes and toilets
      >How many hundreds of years have there been learning institutions without retina scans, and they are as safe today as they've ever been.
      yes but with retina scan... they will be safer :)

    62. Re:s/Freedom/Security/g by compro01 · · Score: 1

      "We" is Canada. Up here, the national average today is $1.326/litre, which is $5.02/US gallon. Locally, the price is $1.354/l or $5.13/G

      --
      upon the advice of my lawyer, i have no sig at this time
    63. Re:s/Freedom/Security/g by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're right. Fewer number would be either a coup or a failed revolution.

    64. Re:s/Freedom/Security/g by Rockoon · · Score: 2

      What's more, the article says that all of the students went through the program, but you're telling me that there were no students at all that objected? I find it hard to believe that there were high school students involved and no one said "no".

      I dont find it so surprising. My generation is quite alarmed about things that the following generation is not alarmed about. This is so because the generations after mine were conditioned in ways that my generation was not. Likely my generation accepts things that the previous generation was alarmed about but we too didnt listen.

      If you never had an absolute right to something, do you miss it?

      Lets get right into the thick of the current erosion:

      If you never lived in a world where the IRS didnt go after those opposed to the erosion of liberty...
      If you never lived in a world where the federal government didn't spy on and invade the privacy of an unfriendly press...
      If you never lived in a world where you had an absolute right to a firearm...

      --
      "His name was James Damore."
    65. Re:s/Freedom/Security/g by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Great, when do we meet up to talk about it? What do you propose?

    66. Re:s/Freedom/Security/g by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It is the responsibility of all good citizens to actively prevent the slide into a police state. Once that becomes unavoidable, it is the responsibility of all good citizens to end the police state as quickly as possible. If you believe that you are in a police state, then now is not the time to wait for the day that it gets so bad. Now is the time to make it that bad.

      I agree with your sentiment, but at this point I fear that violence is required. Our government representatives use security as an excuse to have themselves protected by armed security thus preventing a citizen from approaching them "on the street." They're afraid because they've stopped representing the people of the USA and represent monied interests now that money has become a form of free speech. Like the upper class, they hide from everyday people in the hopes that NFL football and fast food keeps the proletariat happy enough to not notice how bad their lives have really become.

      Here's how bad it's gotten: a small part of me worries that voicing such concern in a public forum, such as /., could get me in trouble.

    67. Re:s/Freedom/Security/g by Jockle · · Score: 1

      I did not know that Google Glass was set up to forward everything all the time to the Feds.

      If companies ever get access to any of the information (and they most likely will), the feds can easily get access to it. At this point, the government is outsourcing its spying efforts to corporations.

    68. Re:s/Freedom/Security/g by Dishevel · · Score: 2

      Of all the companies that have your information and have been getting NSLs ...
      Which ones other than Google have been fighting them in court?
      I trust that Google understands that the privacy of my data is (in the long run) important to their profits.

      --
      Why is it so hard to only have politicians for a few years, then have them go away?
    69. Re:s/Freedom/Security/g by WOOFYGOOFY · · Score: 1

      Biometric information is different..

      Get it?

    70. Re:s/Freedom/Security/g by Jockle · · Score: 1

      Which ones other than Google have been fighting them in court?

      Why does it matter that they occasionally fight back? I trust them no more than I trust the government.

    71. Re:s/Freedom/Security/g by Aryden · · Score: 1

      Still, ALL students just went along with it, c'mon, these are kids, somewhere, someone had to be defiant and rebellious.

    72. Re:s/Freedom/Security/g by BlueStrat · · Score: 1

      well you could imagine terrorists targeting a schoolbus, for example

      They already did. That's what TFS/TFA are about. They used biometric iris scans instead of a bomb this time. That way, they can locate/track and terrorize them for the rest of the children's lives at the terrorists' convenience.

      Strat

      --
      Progressivism (aka US 'Liberalism'): Ideas so good they need a police/surveillance-state to enforce.
    73. Re:s/Freedom/Security/g by Sarius64 · · Score: 1

      That's an interesting viewpoint. When the cops break down your doors, have SWAT shoot and kill your decade old family pets, shoot your wife to death because she was holding a deadly weapon (aka, the baby), and then figure out that they were in the wrong house executing a truancy warrant; then you tell me how much safer those retina scans made us all.

    74. Re:s/Freedom/Security/g by Aryden · · Score: 1

      Pretty sure that wasn't aimed at me as I am against this kind of police state bullshit.

    75. Re:s/Freedom/Security/g by uniquename72 · · Score: 1

      I missed the part where Google Glass was handed out to every child in any given school and would then be impossible to turn off forever.

      Google Glass ONLY records what you want it to record, and the information recorded that gets sent back to Google -- contrary to your assertion below -- can be entirely customized.

    76. Re:s/Freedom/Security/g by uniquename72 · · Score: 1

      Gasoline is much, much cheaper in the U.S. (yes, even in California) than the vast majority of the rest of the world -- I think that was the point.

    77. Re:s/Freedom/Security/g by TitusGroan8856 · · Score: 1

      iris scanning is far to prone to false negatives even in adults. The iris can be changed by trauma, illness and environmental factors. No use to verify identity.

    78. Re:s/Freedom/Security/g by uniquename72 · · Score: 1

      Not a single teacher though, "Hey, there isn't a single logical situation where this could possibly add to the children's safety"?

    79. Re:s/Freedom/Security/g by camperdave · · Score: 1

      No. The suggested measure of the of how bad it has to get is whether the regular people pressure their politicians. Clearly that is not happening yet. So you either have a police state that is bad, but not bad enough to tick off the common man; or you have a state that really isn't a police state yet. Either way, complacency won't get you where you want to go.

      --
      When our name is on the back of your car, we're behind you all the way!
    80. Re:s/Freedom/Security/g by noh8rz10 · · Score: 1

      what happens in the rest of the work isn't relevant. what is relevant is the price I pay at the pump. and it is very high.

    81. Re:s/Freedom/Security/g by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I did not know that Google Glass was set up to forward everything all the time to the Feds.
      or ...
      Are you a bit tarded?

      I wouldn't call the kettle black if I was you.

      http://yro.slashdot.org/story/13/05/18/1233225/fbi-considers-calea-ii-mandatory-wiretapping-on-every-device

    82. Re:s/Freedom/Security/g by Scarletdown · · Score: 1

      It costs me about $24 to fill my humble little Metro (I usually fill it when it's at the 1/4 tank mark). And I typically fill every other week, or every week and a half, depending on how busy I am. If I were to fill from completely empty, then it would be around $32 a shot.

      --
      This space unintentionally left blank.
    83. Re:s/Freedom/Security/g by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That works both ways. Right now, it's only the powerless who get surveilled and recorded. If everyone were to use, for example Google Glass, then TPTB would start to get a taste of their own medicine. All abuses of power would be recorded by default, and made available for all the world to see (unless some divers cut the cable connecting your country to the net in preparation for an assault).

    84. Re:s/Freedom/Security/g by cusco · · Score: 1

      False negatives are a really big issue with biometric scanners, no matter the type. In my experience the hand geometry scanners are the absolute worst. Spend the weekend gardening, touch some poison ivy, have an allergic reaction to something, have your arthritis flare up, or just let your hands get cold/hot and you're now locked out of your workplace. I've only worked with the AOptix product, but it takes an image of both eyes. If scanning the default eye doesn't work for some reason it can (if configured to do so) check the other eye instead. It works better than any other biometric system that I've used. Still, it absolutely should NOT be used as single-factor authentication, an opinion on which the manufacturer agrees.

      --
      "Think about how stupid the average person is. Now, realise that half of them are dumber than that." - George Carlin
    85. Re:s/Freedom/Security/g by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 1

      "No you either have a police state that is bad, but not bad enough to tick off the common man; or you have a state that really isn't a police state yet."

      That is a false dichotomy. There are actually more than two possibilities.

      For example, maybe it really IS that bad, but the "common man", as you put it, hasn't realized it yet.

    86. Re:s/Freedom/Security/g by mjwalshe · · Score: 1

      at least the national media will be much more likely hold them to account.

    87. Re:s/Freedom/Security/g by camperdave · · Score: 1

      There is nothing to do now except wait for the day that it gets so bad - if ever - that regular people start pressuring their politicians to put the cat back in the bag.

      The measuring point being discussed is "bad enough that regular people start pressuring their politicians". It is not possible to be so bad that the common people start pressuring their politicians, yet not bad enough that the common man doesn't realize that it's bad. Or are you proposing that people are unconscously pressuring their politicians?

      --
      When our name is on the back of your car, we're behind you all the way!
    88. Re:s/Freedom/Security/g by lsatenstein · · Score: 1

      Whether you think the program is good or bad is irrelevant. The issue at hand is, they did this to minors without permission from the parents or notification to them.

      But seriously though, why would you need iris scans of kids? Their reasoning is to track the students getting on and off the buses, replacing the identification cards that they students carry now. Oh wait, ALL of the kids had the scans done. What about the kids that do not ride the buses, the ones that walk or have parents/guardians pick them up and drop them off everyday. Not only are they invading the privacy by collecting personal information from a minor without consent, but they are removing a valuable lesson in responsibility, as well as collecting this data for people that will not or do not use the system at all.

      What's more, the article says that all of the students went through the program, but you're telling me that there were no students at all that objected? I find it hard to believe that there were high school students involved and no one said "no".

      How are you going to react when the police come door to door installing biometric scanners and requiring you to scan in/out each time you leave the house, walk into/out of a building, get into/out of your car?

      Are we talking of a photograph of the iris? Is there radiation involved. I think that the school already has archived pictures of every student. It is in must jurisdictions a need to be able to identify a student, to/from school or in the premises.
      The Iris scan has a benefit. The scan will be the same after the child goes through puberty. However, childrens faces and hair styles changes. The iris is consistent, the photo is non invasive, and the concern is an over-exaggeration.
      In the same light, does the teacher have to send home the course material description for the coming week, to have the parents approval?

      What a nonsense topic. Noone is going to kidnap a student based on an Iris photo.

      --
      Leslie Satenstein Montreal Quebec Canada
    89. Re: s/Freedom/Security/g by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Welcome to 1984. People who don't care to see the danger can go line up over there where the nice man will take a picture then leed you to the showers!! Every one else I expect to see you out in the streets.. fighting to the death...

    90. Re:s/Freedom/Security/g by Aryden · · Score: 1

      You're absolutely incorrect. Iris patterns DO change over time. It has been proven.

    91. Re:s/Freedom/Security/g by lsatenstein · · Score: 1

      You're absolutely incorrect. Iris patterns DO change over time. It has been proven.

      --- Do the patterns in Iris's change more severely than the physical anatomies of students ages 11 to 16? I would say that there are probably enough points of reference in an IRIS scan to persist for more than 10 years without changes in intensity or location.
      I am not an ophthalmologist

      --
      Leslie Satenstein Montreal Quebec Canada
    92. Re:s/Freedom/Security/g by ArsonSmith · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Umm, because "Oil is not a local industry. Prices are international"

      --
      Paying taxes to buy civilization is like paying a hooker to buy love.
    93. Re:s/Freedom/Security/g by ArsonSmith · · Score: 1

      Only because the only given choice in the US is "A kick in the nuts or a punch in the face." The idea that we could just have neither is so far in the distant past that the vast majority has forgot it's an option. Remember, "WE HAVE TO DO SOMETHING" and the "Obstructionists in Congress are halting progress" rhetoric. "What are you just going to do nothing?"

      Yes, I say we need a lot more of doing nothing...

      --
      Paying taxes to buy civilization is like paying a hooker to buy love.
    94. Re:s/Freedom/Security/g by ebvwfbw · · Score: 1

      You'll lose both, and deserve neither.

      Thank you Ben Franklin

    95. Re:s/Freedom/Security/g by Aryden · · Score: 1

      Yes they do. To the extent of being unidentifiable in comparison to the early scans in many cases.

    96. Re:s/Freedom/Security/g by Bartles · · Score: 1

      Thanks. If the argument is a that a local incident that reduces capacity causes global prices to increase, it is logical to say that local policies that increase capacity will reduce global prices. The common argument that increasing production in the US won't affect the market because prices are international, does not hold water.

    97. Re:s/Freedom/Security/g by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 1
      While the context of your comment might have been what YOU were replying to, your comment also created its own context:

      "... it is the responsibility of all good citizens to end the police state as quickly as possible. If you believe that you are in a police state, then now is not the time to wait for the day that it gets so bad. Now is the time to make it that bad."

      Either you are talking about pressuring politicians, or you are talking about what to do if you "believe you are in a police state".

      You can't have it both ways. If you believe you are already in a police state, "pressuring politicians" in any normal sense simply isn't going to work.

    98. Re:s/Freedom/Security/g by camperdave · · Score: 1

      While the context of your comment might have been what YOU were replying to, your comment also created its own context:

      "... it is the responsibility of all good citizens to end the police state as quickly as possible. If you believe that you are in a police state, then now is not the time to wait for the day that it gets so bad. Now is the time to make it that bad."

      Either you are talking about pressuring politicians, or you are talking about what to do if you "believe you are in a police state". You can't have it both ways. If you believe you are already in a police state, "pressuring politicians" in any normal sense simply isn't going to work.

      Yes, I can. On one hand, it is the responsibility of the common people, the electorate to pressure politicians. You can have a police state that is not enough of an irritant for the common folk to do so. On the other hand we have a single person, or a group of people who believe they are in such a police state, and can't correct it on their own. So what does this small group do? Make the police state more of an irritant in order to induce the common people into action.

      --
      When our name is on the back of your car, we're behind you all the way!
    99. Re:s/Freedom/Security/g by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 1

      "You can have a police state that is not enough of an irritant for the common folk to do so."

      I don't think that matches what most people mean when they say "police state".

    100. Re:s/Freedom/Security/g by camperdave · · Score: 1

      "You can have a police state that is not enough of an irritant for the common folk to do so."

      I don't think that matches what most people mean when they say "police state".

      ... and maybe that's why the majority isn't doing anything about it.

      --
      When our name is on the back of your car, we're behind you all the way!
    101. Re:s/Freedom/Security/g by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 1

      Whoosh.

    102. Re:s/Freedom/Security/g by strikethree · · Score: 1

      Whether you think the program is good or bad is irrelevant. The issue at hand is, they did this to minors without permission from the parents or notification to them.

      California already did something worse without notifying parents a decade ago: They took my children's pictures and fingerprints without notifying me. The pictures were for matching to a child porn database and the fingerprints were in case they were ever abducted. They may have taken DNA but my son's description of the event was rather confusing since he was only about 6 years old.

      Nobody who has control cares what other people think. The people in control have their purposes and that is all that matters. Note the generic description about those in control. It could be your boss, your father, the police, the chairman of the board, etc. That is why you always limit the control others can have over you.

      --
      "Someone needs to talk to the tree of liberty about its ghoulish drinking problem." by ohnocitizen
  2. Replicants are a real threat by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    They are everywhere

    1. Re:Replicants are a real threat by zlives · · Score: 1

      beat me to "voight-kampff" analogy :) happy friday

  3. scanning students for bus? by iggymanz · · Score: 4, Insightful

    pro-tip: when buses are hijacked or children kidnapped, it will be an adult that does it. As for recognizing kids, the driver can work off a paper with thumbnail pictures

    1. Re:scanning students for bus? by Nickodeimus · · Score: 2

      What you're missing is that a government body has scanned biometric information from people and that information will never ever be removed from the system. This is how they, in a nutshell, put a barcode on every human.

    2. Re:scanning students for bus? by fuzzyfuzzyfungus · · Score: 4, Insightful

      pro-tip: when buses are hijacked or children kidnapped, it will be an adult that does it. As for recognizing kids, the driver can work off a paper with thumbnail pictures

      I wouldn't put it past some of the older students(grades 6-12 certainly would include a few) to be overtly dangerous; but some iris-scanning nonsense also entirely fails to address that, since a student will be an authorized user and sail right through...

      It really doesn't make much sense at all. Even if you wanted to play some electronic-orwell attendance tracking game, iris scanning is both expensive and invasive compared to, say, mag stripes on student IDs.

      Is somebody's cousin the vendor? Does somebody in admin or on the school board jerk off to Minority Report every night?

    3. Re:scanning students for bus? by iggymanz · · Score: 0

      nonsense

      what you're missing it that "goverment systems" at local, state and federal levels are not well-connected heterogeneous systems, they're mostly islands without standard protocols or interchange formats. this local school's scans will not be available to say DHS or IRS or FBI

    4. Re:scanning students for bus? by ShanghaiBill · · Score: 3, Insightful

      As for recognizing kids, the driver can work off a paper with thumbnail pictures

      I am having a hard time understanding why even this is necessary. What problem are they trying to solve? If my daughter wants to go to a friend's house after school, she gets on her friend's schoolbus with her and goes to her house. Some of her friends occasionally ride her bus to our house. The bus driver didn't ask or care. So far this has resulted in no deaths or maiming.

       

    5. Re:scanning students for bus? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      nonsense

      what you're missing it that "goverment systems" at local, state and federal levels are not well-connected heterogeneous systems, they're mostly islands without standard protocols or interchange formats. this local school's scans will not be available to say DHS or IRS or FBI

      SSSSUUUURRREEE they won't.

      And gun-ownership databases won't be leaked to friendly media, either.

    6. Re:scanning students for bus? by Nickodeimus · · Score: 5, Insightful

      ...and it takes one law or event like 9/11 to change that. This is the problem with almost all government overreach. It starts out as a benign "think of the children" scenario and turns into something that is monstrous because some law perverts what was originally intended.

    7. Re:scanning students for bus? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not well-connected YET. That's why it's called a slippery slope...

    8. Re:scanning students for bus? by SJHillman · · Score: 1

      I graduated high school in 2006, but that's basically how it worked for us. If we were going to get dropped off somewhere else or ride a different bus, we just had to give the main office a note ahead of time, which they passed to the relevant bus drivers. It was a simple system that worked well. We didn't need any school ID, every student had at least a dozen teachers that could vouch for their identity if it was necessary.

    9. Re:scanning students for bus? by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      pro-tip: when buses are hijacked or children kidnapped, it will be an adult that does it. As for recognizing kids, the driver can work off a paper with thumbnail pictures

      Neither of which address the problem being targeted. This is about kids going missing. Parent wonder's why Jonny hasn't arrived home, school knows what if any bus they got on and where they got off. Kid gets on school bus, doesn't arrive at school, school knows kid's gone AWOL.

      A low-wage bus driver could be given thumbnail pictures and be required to check the kids on. Which would slow things up. But good luck on making sure the right kids have been ticked off then leaving the bus. That's like trying to hold back a hydrant with your finger.

      There's arguments on both sides of whether it's a good idea, bit let's at least not mis-represent the aim of the system.

    10. Re:scanning students for bus? by gstoddart · · Score: 5, Insightful

      And yet, once this information is in the hands of a private entity or even a government entity, the DHS can demand it under the Patriot Act and not tell anybody.

      At this point, you pretty much have to assume that anything ever collected about you can end up in the hands of government if they decide they want it.

      Imagine a world in which children have all of their biometric data collected and cataloged before they can even spell biometric -- because it seems to be happening.

      I sincerely hope there are some pretty harsh legal penalties for this, and that the companies are ordered to destroy the data. A school board has no business doing this kind of thing without parental consent. This is just blatant stupidity and over-reaching.

      --
      Lost at C:>. Found at C.
    11. Re:scanning students for bus? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Subpoena from a judge? Now it is available. I'm not saying they couldn't get the identity information from other legal means, but if it's already in a database and all that's needed is a judge to rubber stamp the access to it, all the easier.

    12. Re:scanning students for bus? by Speare · · Score: 1

      Per the article, it wasn't so much security, like denying unauthorized people from riding. It was security, like having logs that confirm or deny that Mommy's snowflake got on the bus just like they should have. It's still bullshit, it's just a different kind of bullshit.

      --
      [ .sig file not found ]
    13. Re:scanning students for bus? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Which is completely useless because iris patterns change over time.

    14. Re:scanning students for bus? by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      mag stripes on student IDs.

      You're underestimating the extent to which the kids will subvert a system.

    15. Re:scanning students for bus? by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      So far this has resulted in no deaths or maiming.

      Well it might not at your school. But kids do go missing. The article says that not a single day goes by in the district without a parent enquiring where their AWOL kid is. It might be as innocent as going to a friends house without thinking to phone home. But it might not.

    16. Re:scanning students for bus? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They will with iris scans as well, we aren't talking about the NSA here, we are talking about kids. They subvert fucking anything.

    17. Re:scanning students for bus? by Seumas · · Score: 1

      This isn't about the safety of the kids anymore than tricking parents into submitting biometric data at the local mall for the last thirty years has been. It's about when they're adults and all their personal data has been catalogued for reference before they were even old enough to object.

      That said, how dumb are these children? Even in fifth grade, I was keenly aware of things like this and my right to object, call a parent, leave school - whatever it took. Children are typically not as stupid as we make them out to be, so I am baffled that they didn't bat an eye (hah!) at this.

    18. Re:scanning students for bus? by geekmux · · Score: 3, Insightful

      mag stripes on student IDs.

      You're underestimating the extent to which the kids will subvert a system.

      Yes, and I'm also failing to understand why any of this shit is truly necessary, since it would appear for the most part (99.9999999% statistically?), over the last 50+ years of busing students to/from school, this hasn't been a justified necessity until now, in an era where taxpayers can be bent over at will to pay for greased palm programs.

      And we're stupid and apathetic enough to re-elect them.

    19. Re:scanning students for bus? by Seumas · · Score: 1

      I don't get how that is justification for imposing upon the rights of every single stupid. So what - you have to field an annoying call from a fretting parent once a day. Tough shit.

    20. Re:scanning students for bus? by idontgno · · Score: 2

      am having a hard time understanding why even this is necessary. What problem are they trying to solve?

      The problem they're solving is an unholy combination of over-the-top hover-parenting and "internal passport" movement control on the part of government, summarized as: "We will know where you are at all times, and you will be where we know you are supposed to be at all times."

      Freedom of movement, like most other freedoms (thought, speech, faith) is a problem for control freaks. Your freedom impinges on their control. If they're making the rules, guess which one wins?

      Free people are hard to control. That's a problem for those who want to control people.

      --
      Welcome to the Panopticon. Used to be a prison, now it's your home.
    21. Re:scanning students for bus? by wagnerrp · · Score: 1

      I went to high school in the 90s. I took my city's local public transportation home. When I felt up to it, I would run half a mile through the city to catch the early transfer and get home half an hour earlier. Biometricly secured school buses that drop you off in front of your home? Pussies...

    22. Re:scanning students for bus? by tibit · · Score: 1

      I'd say it's the parents' problem. If the district is too stupid to defend themselves from stupid parents and their stupid kids, someone needs to be replaced at the dsitricty. Technical solutions to people problems usually don't work.

      --
      A successful API design takes a mixture of software design and pedagogy.
    23. Re:scanning students for bus? by ColdWetDog · · Score: 1

      And it takes your typical government contractor to slay that particular monster.

      "You wanted it in a standard data format? You didn't mention that in your RFP. That'll be (a lot) extra."
      "Sorry FBI guys, our data doesn't look like your data, that'll cost a couple of million dollars to fix".

      And besides, Iris scans change over time. You were better off getting fingerprints.

      --
      Faster! Faster! Faster would be better!
    24. Re:scanning students for bus? by ColdWetDog · · Score: 2

      I went to high school in the 70's. We had to push the damned bus uphills. Both ways.

      --
      Faster! Faster! Faster would be better!
    25. Re:scanning students for bus? by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      Bright kids go missing as well as stupid ones. Kids are kids, and they tend to be thoughtless and they misbehave. And nothing in the intelligence of the parent is going to change it. And no amount of intelligence is going to tell them whether the kid has been thoughtless, disobedient, or been kidnapped.

      Just calling people stupid is no answer to anything.

    26. Re:scanning students for bus? by ColdWetDog · · Score: 1

      Man, what a complicated way to solve a simple problem.

      The free market to the rescue.

      --
      Faster! Faster! Faster would be better!
    27. Re:scanning students for bus? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Guess what? Kids have always gone missing.

      Hell, 150 years ago, people had lots of kids because roughly half of all kids didn't make it to adulthood.

      Biometric scanning isn't going to solve missing kids. It's just identification for the NON missing kids.

    28. Re:scanning students for bus? by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      Well, I grew up in the 1970s, and for the 50+ years before that, people hadn't needed computers in their home.

      Also we used to play games in the street.

      Things change.

      I am playing devil's advocate here. I tend to doubt there's cause to justify such a system. But let's have real arguments about it, not false ones.

    29. Re:scanning students for bus? by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      That won't work. You'd need a version with a padlock.

    30. Re:scanning students for bus? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Idiot. You don't think the government can't interconnect with all systems, state and local?

    31. Re:scanning students for bus? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not at the moment.

      But there are some of us working towards centralization.

      Yes, we are the devils, developing a model of efficiency and centralization for governments.

      This is something to be wary of.

    32. Re:scanning students for bus? by Bob+the+Super+Hamste · · Score: 1

      At least they are greased palms.

      --
      Time to offend someone
    33. Re:scanning students for bus? by ShanghaiBill · · Score: 2

      Well it might not at your school. But kids do go missing.

      Yup. This has happened to my daughter several times. She didn't come home on the bus as expected. This is how I dealt with it: I dialed her cellphone number. When she answered, I asked her where she was, and she told me.

      For parents that don't trust their kids with cellphones, and think their kids are too stupid to get on the right school bus, they could strap a bright orange cone on the kid's head with the school bus number printed on it.

      Either way, once school is over, I don't see why it is the schools responsibility to babysit the kids.

    34. Re:scanning students for bus? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Setting aside the anarchist idiocy early in the thread, it would be appear to be a process for getting private business paid in tax dollars.

    35. Re:scanning students for bus? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're also relying on the school bus driver to be an enforcer which isn't going to work out well against a reasonably prepared thug.

    36. Re:scanning students for bus? by Merk42 · · Score: 1

      So far this has resulted in no deaths or maiming.

      Well it might not at your school. But kids do go missing. The article says that not a single day goes by in the district without a parent enquiring where their AWOL kid is. It might be as innocent as going to a friends house without thinking to phone home. But it might not.

      And iris scanning prevents this from happening because...?

    37. Re:scanning students for bus? by cusco · · Score: 2

      The actual reason is because too many school districts were getting money from the Dept. of Education for students who never showed up for classes, so the congresscritters connected with one of the mega-database companies declared that the schools had to prove that the students were actually attending school x-many days of the school year. This is how they prove it.

      --
      "Think about how stupid the average person is. Now, realise that half of them are dumber than that." - George Carlin
    38. Re:scanning students for bus? by cusco · · Score: 1

      I went to school in the 70s, but got the crap beat out of me on the bus by the jocks and the stoners so often that I biked or walked to and from school until I got my drivers license and a car. An hour and a quarter walk was better than getting punched out in front of everyone yet again.

      --
      "Think about how stupid the average person is. Now, realise that half of them are dumber than that." - George Carlin
    39. Re:scanning students for bus? by cusco · · Score: 1

      Actually the program is so that they can prove to the Dept. of Education that they actually have X-many students attending classes every day and be reimbursed properly. The effect ultimate effect is indeed what you say, children are being trained to present ID everywhere for everything, but that's not why these programs are being put into place.

      --
      "Think about how stupid the average person is. Now, realise that half of them are dumber than that." - George Carlin
    40. Re:scanning students for bus? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The stoners? Really?

    41. Re:scanning students for bus? by gander666 · · Score: 1

      Yes, really. Same here. (late 70's - early 80's)

      --
      Suppose you were an idiot and suppose you were a member of Congress ... but I repeat myself. - Mark T
    42. Re:scanning students for bus? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm not so sure I agree with that. Looks to me like the free people of amerika are pretty easy to control.

    43. Re:scanning students for bus? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There's arguments on both sides of whether it's a good idea

      The simple answer is that it's not.

    44. Re:scanning students for bus? by Aryden · · Score: 1

      The initial problem there is paying a school for a kid's attendance based on how many attend each day.

    45. Re:scanning students for bus? by Aryden · · Score: 1

      Then it would be a method of tracking the entry and exiting of the school and would have nothing to do with the school buses. They included kids that walk, drive, bike, take public transportation and the ones that get dropped off and picked up everyday. If that was their plan, they failed spectacularly.

    46. Re:scanning students for bus? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The initial problem there is paying a school for a kid's attendance based on how many attend each day.

      Exactly, but no one wants to do that root-cause analysis that points to a whole lot of pork fat, to include the very individuals sitting in pointless positions making up crap like this.

    47. Re:scanning students for bus? by Aryden · · Score: 1

      Same here, they tried to implement a finger printing scheme in my highschool in the early 90's. Did not go over well at all, not because of parental objection but because of student objection. We had so many kids refuse to use the system that they had to remove it. Which is something odd to me because the school district that did this iris scanning said that all kids were scanned including highschoolers. I find it hard to believe that all of them went through with this without objection and coercion.

    48. Re:scanning students for bus? by SydShamino · · Score: 1

      >> But good luck on making sure the right kids have been ticked off then leaving the bus. That's like trying to hold back a hydrant with your finger.

      And iris scans will somehow make this better? If the students have to line up and scan out to step off the bus, why can't they line up and get checked off?

      --
      It doesn't hurt to be nice.
    49. Re:scanning students for bus? by NoImNotNineVolt · · Score: 1

      Stoners? Beating the crap out of someone?
      Stoners? I think they were smoking oregano. Real stoners would be too busy listening to Pink Floyd or eating snacks to abandon their non-violent demeanor.
      Chill, maaaaaan.

      --
      Chuuch. Preach. Tabernacle.
    50. Re:scanning students for bus? by Richy_T · · Score: 1

      We had no school bus (there was a regular bus you could catch but who wants to spends 12p on that?)

    51. Re:scanning students for bus? by Richy_T · · Score: 1

      But it is satisfying and generally correct.

    52. Re:scanning students for bus? by cusco · · Score: 1

      A sub-species of the Northern Michigan Redneck, who were the only recognized stoners in the area in the mid- late-'70s. All the hippies lived in warmer places.

      --
      "Think about how stupid the average person is. Now, realise that half of them are dumber than that." - George Carlin
    53. Re:scanning students for bus? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The article ACTUALLY says:
      There's not a day goes by that we get a frantic call from parents that they can't find their child.

      So they haven't had a call from parents yet.

    54. Re:scanning students for bus? by ScottCooperDotNet · · Score: 1

      I graduated high school in 2006, but that's basically how it worked for us. If we were going to get dropped off somewhere else or ride a different bus, we just had to give the main office a note ahead of time, which they passed to the relevant bus drivers. It was a simple system that worked well.

      That really prepares you for adulthood and the comparative freedom of college. It's like locking people up for 12 years and then one day just opening the prison gate.

    55. Re:scanning students for bus? by kermidge · · Score: 1

      I attended my first high school in '61. There were around 400 freshmen. No way they even gave much serious thought to trying to keep track of us. Attended second high school starting '62; there were 52 freshmen. Everyone knew or at least recognized everyone else. No problem.

      The shit going on today? Crazy. Way they're going, might as well start by chipping everybody and be done with it. I don't suppose we're that far away from near-field brain-wave pattern gathering as well.

    56. Re:scanning students for bus? by Rockoon · · Score: 1

      Things change.

      You were conditioned to not be alarmed and to make excuses. This is an excuse, and you are not alarmed.

      Will you ever think for yourself?

      --
      "His name was James Damore."
    57. Re:scanning students for bus? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So check attendance in home room.

    58. Re:scanning students for bus? by tibit · · Score: 1

      Pray tell why is it now the school district's business to locate people's kids?! The kid is off the bus, that's it. Just because we today have technology that would allow to track everyone and their poodle everywhere they go doesn't mean everyone should stupidly jump on it. If a parent thinks it's the schools job to keep track of their kid, they are stupid. If a kid is going who knows where without letting their parents know as presumably previously agreed to/demanded by the parents, the kid is stupid. Or perhaps the kid just doesn't give shit. Or whatever.

      --
      A successful API design takes a mixture of software design and pedagogy.
    59. Re:scanning students for bus? by SeaFox · · Score: 1

      I went to high school in the 70's. We had to push the damned bus uphills. Both ways.

      But then the oil embargo ended and the school district could afford to fuel it again, right?

    60. Re:scanning students for bus? by Urza9814 · · Score: 1

      The bus driver sees these same kids twice a day, every day, for years. When I was in school I had the same driver for all seven years of elementary school then most of the way through highschool as well. They get to know the kids pretty quickly, know where they get on and off, know if anything's different. At my school, if you got on a different bus, the driver would ask you who you are, where you're going, make sure you were with whatever friend you said you were going home with, and usually check if you've asked your parents. Yeah, kids lie, but if a kid goes missing on the bus you call the drivers and one of them will know where they ended up.

    61. Re:scanning students for bus? by Sarius64 · · Score: 1

      nonsense

      what you're missing it that "goverment systems" at local, state and federal levels are not well-connected heterogeneous systems, they're mostly islands without standard protocols or interchange formats. this local school's scans will not be available to say DHS or IRS or FBI

      Seriously, you're a fucking lunatic.

    62. Re:scanning students for bus? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      By definition bright kids can't go missing.
      Unless they are kidnapped, or run away.

    63. Re:scanning students for bus? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As for recognizing kids, the driver can work off a paper with thumbnail pictures

      So you don't just want to scan their irises, you want to scan their whole face!

    64. Re:scanning students for bus? by iggymanz · · Score: 1

      seriously, you must not work in IT. And never been a contractor to federal or state or large city IT. I've done all the above. Uncrank your tinfoil hat

    65. Re:scanning students for bus? by iggymanz · · Score: 1

      if the DHS knew who had it. if the school kept the system they bought a decade ago without forklift upgrading to whatever shiny new thing the district superintendant got a blowjob to buy....

    66. Re:scanning students for bus? by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      Yup. This has happened to my daughter several times. She didn't come home on the bus as expected. This is how I dealt with it: I dialed her cellphone number. When she answered, I asked her where she was, and she told me.

      I'm very glad to hear that Bill. Now, what if she didn't answer the phone?

    67. Re:scanning students for bus? by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      I have no idea how what you just said relates to what went before. Literally no idea what point you're making, so I can neither agree nor disagree.

      Though out of two lines the second was a pretty pointless insult, so I'm not hopeful of the there actually bing anything worthwhile to be decoded from the first line.

    68. Re:scanning students for bus? by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      Because it's quick and accurate.

    69. Re:scanning students for bus? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I sincerely hope there are some pretty harsh legal penalties for this, and that the companies are ordered to destroy the data. A school board has no business doing this kind of thing without parental consent. This is just blatant stupidity and over-reaching.

      Unfortunately there are never any penalties for things like this. Technically school administrators are government employees and the government takes care of their own by burying any lawsuits.

      Reporter Michelle Malkin caught up with Davis on Wednesday and he apologized for the board’s actions and confirmed that the data had been destroyed.

      And if you believe that the data was actually destroyed, I have a nice new bridge north of Seattle for sale.

    70. Re:scanning students for bus? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      OHMYGOD!!! THINKOFTHECHILDREN!! Right? Because unlikely things could possibly happen in concocted scenarios, we need government agents on every school bus biometrically cataloging the students and tracking their movements. Because of course that's a benign scenario that can have no unintended outcomes.

    71. Re:scanning students for bus? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "...scenario and turns into something that is monstrous because some law perverts what was originally intended."

      The law doesn't pervert anything. Humans use laws pervert what was originally intended by those laws in their chase to accumulate(abuse) power over the masses.

    72. Re:scanning students for bus? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      " the schools had to prove that the students were actually attending school x-many days of the school year. This is how they prove it."

      Funny, when I was in school the teachers took roll call. Problem solved.

    73. Re:scanning students for bus? by celle · · Score: 1

      " An hour and a quarter walk"

      Actually, maybe you should thank them. You're probably in much better health than any of them, assuming any of them are still alive.

    74. Re:scanning students for bus? by celle · · Score: 1

      "That won't work. You'd need a version with a padlock."

      And made of space titanium.

  4. Oh, the ironies... by Mystakaphoros · · Score: 5, Funny

    Meanwhile, down the hall, students were studying the Bill of Rights.

    1. Re:Oh, the ironies... by nitehawk214 · · Score: 2

      Which, sadly, the "o" in "Bill of Rights" was concealing an iris scanning camera.

      --
      I'm a good cook. I'm a fantastic eater. - Steven Brust
    2. Re:Oh, the ironies... by JustOK · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Illinois high school teacher John Dryden has been reprimanded and docked a day’s pay after informing his students of their Constitutional rights before administering a school-mandated survey about “at-risk behavior.”

      http://www.theblaze.com/stories/2013/05/29/high-school-teacher-punished-for-informing-students-of-their-fifth-amendment-right/

      --
      rewriting history since 2109
    3. Re:Oh, the ironies... by Mystakaphoros · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Illinois high school teacher John Dryden has been reprimanded and docked a day’s pay after informing his students of their Constitutional rights before administering a school-mandated survey about “at-risk behavior.”

      http://www.theblaze.com/stories/2013/05/29/high-school-teacher-punished-for-informing-students-of-their-fifth-amendment-right/

      Sadly, it doesn't surprise me. When I was teaching high school journalism, I got repeated verbal orders to infringe on student free speech, which I was supposed to follow up on without a paper trail so that admin couldn't be connected to the violation. Got in a fair amount of trouble for "failing to do so" a few times. Needless to say, I don't work there anymore.

    4. Re:Oh, the ironies... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, no they weren't. And therein is the problem.

    5. Re:Oh, the ironies... by stewsters · · Score: 4, Interesting

      That teacher is more awesome that he knows. I hope the kids paid attention to the lesson they received that day.

    6. Re:Oh, the ironies... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah well.. we all know Illinois is completely dominated by right-wing tea partiers who hate the constitution. That tea party Bush guy came from Illinois right? Fortunately, Barack Obama, who is literally the only human on earth who appreciates and protects the Constitution, would never have anything to do with Illinois.

    7. Re:Oh, the ironies... by Seumas · · Score: 1

      Meanwhile, down the hall, students were studying the Bill of Rights.

      This clearly indicates how out of touch your expectations of the public school system are. Even in the early 90s, I never dealt with the Bill of Rights or the Constitution as a whole in school. Not even in civics class. The only time we ever discussed it was in third grade, when we each had to remember one paragraph of the pre-amble in class and repeat it. One paragraph.. of the preamble...

    8. Re:Oh, the ironies... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Read the 666th amendment: "Dou shall do as i say, not as i doeth"

    9. Re:Oh, the ironies... by Zalbik · · Score: 1

      And just out of curiosity, what right was being trampled on here? The Bill of Rights actually says very little about the right to privacy.

      Don't get me wrong, I think that what the school is doing is a waste of time and money. I skimmed the article and the school claims it's basically being implemented so they know where and when students get on and off the bus. i.e. if Little Johnny get's off at the wrong stop, the school can now figure out which stop he got off at and when. Presumably, they could even enhance the system so it warned the driver if Little Johnny was getting off at a non-assigned stop.

      My wife and I use a much more effective non-technical solution to this problem for our children. We've told our children which stop is theirs. They get off at it. The couple of times my son has fallen asleep and missed his stop, he either (a) got off at the next nearest stop and walks home or (b) rides back to the school and calls one of us.

      I've never been to Polk County. Is it such a dangerous place that schools need to track the whereabouts of students at all times? What are they afraid of?

    10. Re:Oh, the ironies... by dmiller1984 · · Score: 1

      This clearly indicates how out of touch your expectations of the public school system are. Even in the early 90s, I never dealt with the Bill of Rights or the Constitution as a whole in school. Not even in civics class. The only time we ever discussed it was in third grade, when we each had to remember one paragraph of the pre-amble in class and repeat it. One paragraph.. of the preamble...

      Not sure what state you went to school in, but in Illinois we have a required class on government in high school where the study of the Bill of Rights and Constitution are a big part of the curriculum. We also had to pass a state test on the Constitution to pass 8th grade. It's surprising, and disappointing, to hear that isn't the norm in other parts of the country.

    11. Re:Oh, the ironies... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What the hell are you trying to say?

      Both parties want control.

      It's not like Texas/Oklahoma/Kansas, idiot conservative states all, are any better.

      But rant on dude.

    12. Re:Oh, the ironies... by microTodd · · Score: 1

      Thank you so much for sharing this. I immediately went and signed the petitions in his support. This man is awesome.

      --
      "You cannot find out which view is the right one by science in the ordinary sense." - C.S. Lewis on Intelligent Design
    13. Re:Oh, the ironies... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's a good example of rote memorization education right there. "Pass our awful standardized tests by memorizing information. Understanding not required."

    14. Re:Oh, the ironies... by Jockle · · Score: 1

      The Bill of Rights actually says very little about the right to privacy.

      Even if that's true, the bill of rights is not the end-all be-all of rights.

    15. Re:Oh, the ironies... by Jason+Levine · · Score: 1

      I'm convinced that instances like this, more than anything else, are behind the poor performance of our public schools. Good teacher does X which doesn't conform 100% to what the school bureaucrats or politicians (who frequently don't even have their kids IN public schools) have mandated. Good teacher gets good results, but is punished by said bureaucrats/politicians for not following their mandated actions. Eventually, good teacher gets tired of fighting the system and leaves the teaching profession. This just leaves the teachers who will do exactly what they're told without any cares as to whether they are giving the students a good education.

      Then the bureaucrats and politicians see falling scores, cry horribly about it (in front of as many cameras as possible, of course), and come up with more actions (ranging from misguided to idiotic) that they are sure will save our schools.

      As an example, see the Common Core testing that New York State students have been subjected to. Elementary students as young as Kindergarten are taking these extremely stressful tests and teachers aren't allowed to see them at all. After taking them, they go to Pearson where they are graded and destroyed so nobody can double-check them. Kids have been so stressed that they've thrown up on the tests. Yes, Pearson demands that the thrown-up-upon tests be bagged and sent back to them. Tossing it in the trash can get a school in deep trouble (as it could leak what's on the test). Teachers hate these tests, parents hate these tests, students hate these tests, but Pearson/bureaucrats/politicians love them so they are mandated.

      --
      My sci-fi novel, Ghost Thief, is now available from Amazon.com.
    16. Re:Oh, the ironies... by UnknownSoldier · · Score: 1

      > , the bill of rights is not the end-all be-all of rights.

      Try READING the 10th amendment sometime.

        "The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the people."

    17. Re:Oh, the ironies... by Jockle · · Score: 1

      I'm not seeing your point. It almost looks like you disagree with what I said, but I'm not sure how quoting the 10th amendment is in opposition to what I said.

    18. Re:Oh, the ironies... by Rockoon · · Score: 1

      The Bill of Rights actually says very little about the right to privacy.

      It doesnt have to. It is not an enumeration of your rights.

      The fact that you think that it is proves the point that somewhere between my generation and yours, they started filling heads with complete shit about what the constitution is and is not.

      --
      "His name was James Damore."
    19. Re:Oh, the ironies... by jphess2 · · Score: 1

      Meanwhile, down the hall, students were studying Intelligent Design.

      Sorry couldn't resist.

    20. Re:Oh, the ironies... by Whorhay · · Score: 1

      What really puts it over the top for me is that the surveys were prelabeled with each students name. I remember when I took a similiar survey in middle school that the forms were anonymous. We could write in our names if we wanted but there was no pressure to do so and there were no visible unique identifiers on the forms.

      Not that it mattered a whole lot to me, I was one of those kids that never did anything fun enough to make it onto those surveys. I just remember thinking that if I had answered yes to any of those questions there was no way in hell I'd be putting my name to it.

    21. Re:Oh, the ironies... by Urza9814 · · Score: 1

      In my highschool (class of '08) we studied the Constitution several times; I think it was 9th, 10th, and 12th grade (Civics, US History, and Government). We celebrated Constitution Day with a ten foot tall copy in the hallway and teachers handing out pocket constitutions. The more advanced (AP) classes read the Federalist Papers, John Locke's Treatise on Civil Government, etc...

      This was a public school in a small town in western PA.

    22. Re:Oh, the ironies... by Mystakaphoros · · Score: 1

      I'm convinced that instances like this, more than anything else, are behind the poor performance of our public schools. Good teacher does X which doesn't conform 100% to what the school bureaucrats or politicians (who frequently don't even have their kids IN public schools) have mandated. Good teacher gets good results, but is punished by said bureaucrats/politicians for not following their mandated actions. Eventually, good teacher gets tired of fighting the system and leaves the teaching profession. This just leaves the teachers who will do exactly what they're told without any cares as to whether they are giving the students a good education.

      Then the bureaucrats and politicians see falling scores, cry horribly about it (in front of as many cameras as possible, of course), and come up with more actions (ranging from misguided to idiotic) that they are sure will save our schools.

      As an example, see the Common Core testing that New York State students have been subjected to. Elementary students as young as Kindergarten are taking these extremely stressful tests and teachers aren't allowed to see them at all. After taking them, they go to Pearson where they are graded and destroyed so nobody can double-check them. Kids have been so stressed that they've thrown up on the tests. Yes, Pearson demands that the thrown-up-upon tests be bagged and sent back to them. Tossing it in the trash can get a school in deep trouble (as it could leak what's on the test). Teachers hate these tests, parents hate these tests, students hate these tests, but Pearson/bureaucrats/politicians love them so they are mandated.

      Regarding the teacher issue, I've heard it called the "Dead Sea" effect... anything that can (or is forced to) escape does, just like the water vapor, and then the salt and detritus just accumulates over time. But it's easy to manage, because it's already known beforehand. Happens sometimes in IT departments too, but in business there's often more of an incentive to innovate. In public education, the squeaky wheel gets the ax, and then everyone else abides until someone becomes problematic, and then they get the ax.

      The tests, then, become a convenient way to decide who is most deserving of the ax.

    23. Re:Oh, the ironies... by Mystakaphoros · · Score: 1

      9th and 10th cases are difficult to prove. Not that you're not on to something, but it's often better to try to find a violation of the first 8.

  5. Biometric school bus security by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Really, Florida? Really? Of all the things that need to be fixed about your state you're worried about who gets on your school buses?

    1. Re:Biometric school bus security by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Really, Florida? Really? Of all the things that need to be fixed about your state you're worried about who gets on your school buses?

      Ha. All those retirees down there means there are WAAAY too many of them that feel entitled to ride school buses because they're paying taxes but don't have kids in school.

  6. imagine the confusion if by nopainogain · · Score: 3, Funny

    the kids went home and said "mommy, the school scanned the pupils today".

    1. Re:imagine the confusion if by unixisc · · Score: 1

      When I first read the headline, I thought that this was a really geeky or Hollywoodesque school, where students individually owned their own personal Silicon Graphics IRIS workstations. But then I thought about how would an Iris go under a flatbed scanner, and then, it hit me...

  7. If anyone should know.. by houbou · · Score: 0

    All of these issues are pretty much based on so much of the violence which the US schools have been faced for the last 20+ yrs. But the truth is, when it comes to issues of security, for once, there should be clear direction on this from the Federal Government. It should NOT be left to either State, County, Municipal and/or at the school's discretion. The US needs to start acting like the country it is supposed to be, not just the fractions which have appended themselves over time.

    1. Re:If anyone should know.. by bmajik · · Score: 2

      IMO, this is a terrible place for the feds to get involved. What is appropriate for middle schools in urban high-crime areas is not appropriate for elementary schools in rural North Dakota.

      School violence is not historically higher now than it has ever been, and overall violence in the US is at an all-time low.

      The centralization of education has been uniformly terrible for the US.

      --
      My opinions are my own, and do not necessarily represent those of my employer.
    2. Re:If anyone should know.. by wbr1 · · Score: 1
      The US was designed as a -republic- so that the states could retain a high level of autonomy. Over the years the federal government has usurped more and more of this autonomy.

      The factions/fractions of which you speak are likely the 2 party system, and that exists independently now of any states rights. The powers in both parties pander to a few hot button (but ultimately of little importance) issues to please their base, while steadily ruining this country for their own greed and the greed of those with money (IE big corps).

      --
      Silence is a state of mime.
    3. Re:If anyone should know.. by Hatta · · Score: 5, Informative

      All of these issues are pretty much based on so much of the violence which the US schools have been faced for the last 20+ yrs.

      Juvenile violent crime has been falling for the past 20 years. These issues must be based on something else.

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    4. Re:If anyone should know.. by musterion · · Score: 1

      Utter nonsense.. We should teach our little snowflakes that disciplne and I mean self discipline is a good thing. I realize I'm being a bit atavastic, but teach them to sit down, shut up, and learn.

    5. Re:If anyone should know.. by Seumas · · Score: 2

      What an ignorant statement. We are a union of states. I don't know where the hell you hail from, but the concept is that states determine their own laws and govern themselves. I don't know where people have this ass-backward concept that somehow it all comes from the top-down and the Federal government legislates and controls everything.

      Additionally, this has NOTHING to do with "violence the schools have been facing for the last twenty years". The violence has not changed dramatically (especially of the kind you're likely referencing). This is purely a fear-based personal-data grab. Having a child's iris data on record in no way prevents him from committing a crime or being the victim of a crime. All it does is *commit* a crime against his or her humanity by treating them like a criminal and entering them into a life-long database without having actually committed any crime to justify it.

      That so many people have the mindset you've shared is actually kind of terrifying. How the hell can people exercise and defend their rights when they don't even understand them?

    6. Re:If anyone should know.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Sorry for posting without my name. The problem is the adults who are in charge and I am not referring to the teachers. There is NO discipline that can really be given. Parents whine and complain all the time. I had a parent who refused to come to parent teacher conference because she knew what ALL the teachers would say about her little angel. Anytime anything goes wrong, the student explodes and the teacher is blamed by the parent.

      Part two: New Teachers are now being taught horrid methods of teaching. Students may get some knowledge about some things however, with the projects the breadth is lacking.

      Part three: standardized testing and common core are making students more dumb. The testing requires teachers to teach to the test. I know most say they do not teach to the test. But they do. Even I did it a little. I have to, so I can retain my job.

      Part four: In my district they teach reading and math in the elementary. There is no science or social studies till 5th grade. By the time they come to the middle school: they cannot write, they hate reading, and cannot think or reason.

    7. Re:If anyone should know.. by houbou · · Score: 1

      It's not an ignorant statement. What is ignorant, especially in this day and age is to think that total freedom is something you can always get when in the end, you have dependencies to answers to. The notion of 'independent' states in today's world is pure fantasy. Few US states would be able to survive in these times on their own, especially fiscally. California, New York, sure, they could. Heck, there are cities going bankrupt. Anyways, It's a point of view and I believe that mine is valid. When it comes to "SECURITY' and everything that goes with it, it should equally enforced in all US states. Whatever the measures are, they should be equal. It makes sense, because it is "NATIONAL" security. Anyways, we can agree to disagree. But in the end, there is a saying. The needs of the many outweighs the needs of the few or the one.. "I know, totally Star Trek", and it aptly applies in this situation.. :)

    8. Re:If anyone should know.. by houbou · · Score: 0

      As I've respond in another comment, when you have dependencies to answers to, the the notion of 'independent' states becomes moot point. Few US states would be able to survive in these times on their own, especially fiscally. California, New York, sure, they could, but not every state could, heck there are cities going bankrupt. When it comes to "SECURITY' and everything that goes with it, it should equally enforced in all US states. Whatever the measures are, they should be equal. It makes sense, because it is "NATIONAL" security.

    9. Re:If anyone should know.. by houbou · · Score: 1

      LOL.. yeah, it would make things simple if we could achieve that goal of yours. I agree. But, alas, it doesn't seem like it's gonna happen and again, agreeing with you here, so, it's kinda sad.

    10. Re:If anyone should know.. by houbou · · Score: 1

      I'm not talking about centralizing education, but centralizing security measures. Whether it's for employment, education, etc.. If there was a coherent well placed system across the country, it would make more sense. It would be more cost-efficient and would be much more effective. And then you wouldn't be seeing schools such as the one mentioned in this article which decided to do their own retina scans.

    11. Re:If anyone should know.. by bmajik · · Score: 1

      It's not clear to me how that takes into consideration the vastly different security needs for different organizations, settings, and assets.

      The way to prevent florida schools from installing retina scanners is for florida to pass a law saying that retina scanning without prior consent is illegal in public places. Simple as that.

      --
      My opinions are my own, and do not necessarily represent those of my employer.
    12. Re:If anyone should know.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It makes sense, because it is "NATIONAL" security.

      I was not aware that children in schools were a concern for national security. Government shilling much?

    13. Re:If anyone should know.. by Urza9814 · · Score: 1

      Yes, because the public school in the town where nobody locks their doors needs the same protection as a public school in the Bronx.

      This is EXACTLY the kind of thinking that got someone shot and killed at my highschool a few years back. Crazy local homeless guy turns up looking for a job. Administrators refuse to let him in, and call the police because he seems suspicious. Now, this is a small town with a homeless population of four. Everyone, cops included, know who these people are. But hey, post-9/11, something suspicious going on! Every school in the district goes into lockdown and the police pull up with their brand new DHS-funded anti-terrorism gear, all excited to have a chance to finally play with them. Homeless guy sticks his hand in his pocket; cop freaks out thinking he's reaching for a gun; and the homeless guy gets a shotgun blast to the chest. Died right there on the sidewalk with students watching, no weapons or anything found, no investigation conducted into the shooting.

    14. Re:If anyone should know.. by Urza9814 · · Score: 1

      Protecting a small highschool in Ebensburg, PA is not national security. A freakin' nuclear bomb could go off in that school and, other than fear and paranoia, the rest of the nation would hardly notice.

      National security is protecting New York City from nuclear missiles. National security, as the name implies, is about the security of the ENTIRE NATION. That's why the feds control the military, but the local police are controlled by the local government -- because security is one of those things that DOES vary wildly and it is therefore best left in local control. Makes more sense for the feds to control the curriculum than the security. In rural PA, saying something is "secure" means it's tied down so it won't blow away. In NYC, it means metal detectors and armed guards. But the list of US Presidents or the rules of a chemical reaction don't change.

    15. Re:If anyone should know.. by FunPika · · Score: 1

      No they probably actually are. While such crimes have been going down, they are much more likely to be heard about across the country than they were 20 years ago. If someone got non-fatally stabbed at a high-crime area school in the 80s, it probably would have been local news for a day or two at best. Today it would likely spread quickly through social media and end up being seen as "breaking news" across the country for several days. It may be going down, but the amount of what does happen you hear about has gone up enough to give the perception that juvenile violent crime is going up.

      --
      After years of not using a signature, I am going to make one to say the following: Fuck Beta
    16. Re:If anyone should know.. by houbou · · Score: 1

      You don't get the point. Identity and Security go hand in hand. Standardized the identification process, eliminate duplication and confusion. One system which basically tags you from birth to death. That's what I'm talking about.. After all, why are they doing retinal scans in the first place? TO KEEP IDENTIFICATION information! and why is that? AMONGST other reasons, in case there are any security issues. It's not the ONLY reason, it is ONE of the them. Seriously, it is easy to say that it's not because you are on Slashdot that you have any smarts. I would expect more from some of the people who have commented my comments. Sad.

    17. Re:If anyone should know.. by Urza9814 · · Score: 1

      OK, now I think it's safe to assume your original post was sarcastic and went over everyone's heads, right....?

    18. Re:If anyone should know.. by celle · · Score: 1

      " The needs of the many outweighs the needs of the few or the one.. "I know, totally Star Trek", and it aptly applies in this situation."

      If you have watched star trek it doesn't always work so well for them either.

  8. Where are these parents by Hatta · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Where are these parents when it's time to protest actual privacy violations?

    --
    Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    1. Re:Where are these parents by localman57 · · Score: 4, Funny

      Fucking around on Facebook.

    2. Re:Where are these parents by smooth+wombat · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Cheering on the TSA and hooting it up for the Patriot Act.

      --
      We will bankrupt ourselves in the vain search for absolute security. -- Dwight D. Eisenhower
    3. Re:Where are these parents by Mozai · · Score: 1

      The responsible ones are working two jobs (each) to cover their school debts, house mortgages, failed investments into other people's bad debts, tiered health-care, ...

    4. Re:Where are these parents by Dripdry · · Score: 2

      No, they're probably worried more about keeping their job and healthcare from day to day than about some dumbass policy at school that they know they can't change anyway since they have no time to go to the board meetings and don't want to get involved in crazy school board politics (yes, of course they exist). Some even say they don't want to rankle the neighbors with politics.
      This is the reason that the person who did the final draft of the 1st Amendment, Fischer Ames, was a HUGE critic of democracy: People are busy. Really busy. they would not have time to help run the government! That is what is happening here.

      This We're Smart and Everyone Else Is Stupid mentality you're fostering is part of the destruction of our country, a subtly vicious meritocracy, and it HAS to frickin stop if we want any progress. Parents are NOT dumb, they're over-frickin-worked and exhausted! They have little or no time to worry about rights. They just want their kids to get a good education (yes, I know the argument here...) They trust in the school system because it's the only thing available to them, and a host of other reasons.

      --
      -
    5. Re:Where are these parents by Hatta · · Score: 1

      And yet they still have time to protest a harmless measurement and aren't able to do anything to protest actual privacy violations.

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    6. Re:Where are these parents by chrismcb · · Score: 1

      Where are these parents when it's time to protest actual privacy violations?

      Are you suggesting this is NOT an actual privacy violation? If this isn't then what is?

  9. Overkill Much? by sargon666777 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Really? We need military levels of record keeping to keep track of school children getting on busses? Seems wasteful, and overkill.. If you need an ID (which I dont think you should for school busses) then a simple picture ID should do.. Growing up my bus driver (and the kids) knew all the kids getting on and off anyhow..

    --
    Am I lying when I tell you that im telling the truth? Or am I telling the truth when I say that Im lying?
    1. Re:Overkill Much? by PolygamousRanchKid+ · · Score: 3, Insightful

      We need military levels of record keeping to keep track of school children getting on buses?.

      Follow the money. Whoever implemented the system for a juicy fee probably has good connections to the school board.

      The whole thing sounds like boondoggle pork to me.

      --
      Schroedinger's Brexit: The UK is both in and out of the EU at the same time!
    2. Re:Overkill Much? by cusco · · Score: 1

      That was probably before the school bus system got privatized, when it was a real job with decent pay. Now it's barely minimum wage, drivers get treated like crap and bounced from route to route to make sure that they all stay under 30 hrs/week so that they don't qualify for benefits. School buses have become the Walmart of the transportation industry.

      --
      "Think about how stupid the average person is. Now, realise that half of them are dumber than that." - George Carlin
    3. Re:Overkill Much? by celle · · Score: 1

      " Growing up my bus driver (and the kids) knew all the kids getting on and off anyhow.."

      That's when the bus drivers were often shit paid mothers of some of the students. Now they're all shit paid, often rotated, contract workers.

  10. So let's give 'em *MORE* tax money! YAY!!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Everybody who hates this type of government behavior but wants everyone to "pay their fair share" won't make the connection, so I'll make it for them:

    All governments abuse power. Give them more power (tax money) and they WILL abuse it.

    Don't believe me? Look at Obama. George W. Bush on steroids. Bush never turned the IRS into a trained attack dog. Bush never performed "extrajudicial killings" on US citizens.

  11. Backdoor Contact lens??? by RobertLTux · · Score: 4, Funny

    i wonder how hard it would be to make a contact lens that caused the scanner to throw an error (or worse was a backdoor into the system).

    Scanning Image
    Processing
    Identified Krystal Rayne Dawnmeadow approved SYSTEM ADMIN ALL ACCESS

    (and of course daddy would have told his favorite minion exactly what to punch into a terminal to .....)

    --
    Any person using FTFY or editing my postings agrees to a US$50.00 charge
    1. Re:Backdoor Contact lens??? by SJHillman · · Score: 2

      Just ask little Bobby Tables, I hear he got new contacts.

    2. Re:Backdoor Contact lens??? by Dachannien · · Score: 1

      Krystal Rayne Dawnmeadow

      An error of type 420 has occurred.

    3. Re:Backdoor Contact lens??? by RobertLTux · · Score: 1

      its all part of The Hack brother would you expect a girl with that name to be a hackers minion??

      --
      Any person using FTFY or editing my postings agrees to a US$50.00 charge
    4. Re:Backdoor Contact lens??? by Xyrus · · Score: 1

      You could make a lot of money that way. Or psychologically scar the teachers for life by embedding QR codes into the contacts.

      Computer: Scanning....
      Computer: Processing....
      Identified "Enlarge Your Penis http://bigwiener.com/" approved. Accessing school video feed....

      Teacher: What the...why did the class TV come on? And why is it showing a browser window?
      *TV displays goatse*
      Teacher: *vomits*
      *TV displays tubgirl*
      Teacher: *gak!* *cardiac arrest*

      --
      ~X~
  12. oblig: Ben Franklin quote by stevegee58 · · Score: 1

    "They who can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety, deserve neither liberty nor safety."

  13. And...dip! by Impy+the+Impiuos+Imp · · Score: 1

    More from TFA:

    "Parents finally put a stop to it when one child told them it was pretty cool, and that the next day Mr. Johnston was going to show the boys how unique, like fingerprints, were stampings of their ball sac patterns."

    --
    (-1: Post disagrees with my already-settled worldview) is not a valid mod option.
  14. Re:So let's give 'em *MORE* tax money! YAY!!!! by Sperbels · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Bush never performed "extrajudicial killings" on US citizens.

    I suppose we don't really know....because the Patriot Act enacted under Bush, made it legal to disappear US citizens in secrecy.

  15. School Bus Security? No. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's part of a government biometric database, they will encourage you to submit your information by fear.
    http://www.wired.com/threatlevel/2013/05/immigration-reform-dossiers/

    I wonder where all my health test results go once "Obamacare" is in full effect.

  16. So what exactly is the problem with this? by lxs · · Score: 1

    Unlike RFID, iris scans can't be used to remotely track your movements, and unlike fingerprints they can't be used to identify your presence after the fact. (Well they can but only with your permission. Even good security camera mostly produces pictures that makes identifying faces difficult. It certainly can't take a sharp enough image of your iris from a distance.)

    1. Re:So what exactly is the problem with this? by fermion · · Score: 2

      Unlike RFID, which is a perfectly reasonable way to implement the safety and record keeping issues that parents want, iris scans cannot be replaced when the information becomes compromised. For instance, when the school database is hacked and the biometric information is leaked, we cannot the change the eyes. Once compromised it is always compromised. This is the general issue with biometric scans. it does not fail gracefully. And of course iris scans are RFID squared. You can't leave your eyes behind.

      --
      "She's a scientist and a lesbian. She's not going to let it slide." Orphan Black
    2. Re:So what exactly is the problem with this? by SengirV · · Score: 1

      Really? It's a government entity collecting unique biometric data to be stored in perpetuity for no defined purpose. No communication with parents, no direction as to it's use, and school officials employing the typical school system no-think by saying, "I do what I am told". The whole thing smacks of slimy Big Brother tactics.

      But then again, you sound like one of those types who like to allow minors to undergo surgical procedures without the parent's consent. It takes a village, absent the parents potential for objections, right?

      --

      Prof. Farnsworth - "Oh a lesson in not changing history from Mr I'm-My-Own-Grandpa!"

    3. Re:So what exactly is the problem with this? by gl4ss · · Score: 1

      what's the upside to it? apart from them having a db of the irises after doing it, that is.

      what's the downside to them keeping a db of penis lengths? nothing. so let's measure everyone!

      --
      world was created 5 seconds before this post as it is.
    4. Re:So what exactly is the problem with this? by SengirV · · Score: 1

      flaccid, semi, or fully at attention? I have to know how to prepare.

      --

      Prof. Farnsworth - "Oh a lesson in not changing history from Mr I'm-My-Own-Grandpa!"

    5. Re:So what exactly is the problem with this? by lxs · · Score: 2

      Are you seriously suggesting that invading the sanctity of the body is in the same category as taking a close-up picture of their eyes?

    6. Re:So what exactly is the problem with this? by ColdWetDog · · Score: 1

      First, Iris scans aren't necessarily stable over time.

      Second, we're working on distance viewing of irises.

      Not that this changes the fundamental issues of parent neglect, apathy and over arching government. But as usual, the government is proving to be a bunch of technological dullards.

      --
      Faster! Faster! Faster would be better!
    7. Re:So what exactly is the problem with this? by alen · · Score: 1

      they are verifying the kids got on and off the school bus

      if something happens to a kid the parents will be the first ones to sue the school and say that the school is responsible for keeping track of their kids, etc, etc ,etc

      except when the schools start to do this there is outrage

    8. Re:So what exactly is the problem with this? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      When I was in school and rode a bus, we had a driver who was competent. They knew the kids names, and where they lived and if they got on or off the bus. They even noticed when a kid was absent or suddenly got a car..... They noticed when someone got off at a friends house, generally they did their job.

    9. Re:So what exactly is the problem with this? by SecurityGuy · · Score: 1

      1) Information like this tends to be used for other things. Sometimes those other things are objectionable to the point where you wouldn't consent to give up the information if you knew what it was going to be used for later.
      2) It's wasteful of taxpayer money.
      3) It conditions these kids to obey questionable directions from people in positions of authority, even when those directions reach beyond their authority.
      4) It's not clear what actual problem they're solving. Older kids have been getting on buses forever and do fine. Younger kids should be under the direct supervision of an adult.
      5) Solving such non-problems often goes hand-in-hand with not solving actual problems. I can't speak for FL, but in my neck of the woods it's common for kids, even in elementary schools, to have bus stops on roads with significant traffic and high (40 and up) speed limits. Every year there are news reports of kids hit and killed, but hey, the school district saves a little money by not driving into subdivisions. I'm sure these schools have something more useful they could do with the time, money, and attention that went into doing this.

      That's just off the top of my head.

    10. Re:So what exactly is the problem with this? by cusco · · Score: 1

      iris scans can't be used to remotely track your movements

      Wrong. The AOptix iris scanner uses a deformable mirror like the astronomical telescopes, and three years ago could take reliable iris scans from 1-3 meters away in under a second. Both eyes. It uses an infrared camera and a set of infrared LEDs so even in complete dark you wouldn't know. While designed as a biometric access control system, the technology is easily adapted to other uses and is neither patented nor bleeding-edge.

      --
      "Think about how stupid the average person is. Now, realise that half of them are dumber than that." - George Carlin
    11. Re:So what exactly is the problem with this? by OldSoldier · · Score: 1

      I think he's suggesting RFID badges, not under the skin implants.

    12. Re:So what exactly is the problem with this? by Rockoon · · Score: 1

      Are you seriously suggesting that invading the sanctity of the body is in the same category as taking a close-up picture of their eyes?

      The fact that you had to really dress up the surgery thing with "invasion" and "sanctity" tells us that even you know that the argument you are trying to make doesnt stand on its own, that it needs some help and you gave it every bit of the help you possibly could.

      --
      "His name was James Damore."
    13. Re:So what exactly is the problem with this? by hurfy · · Score: 1

      Probably before lowest-bid contracted school buses everywhere......

      Does the private company get cheaper buses?, cheaper gas? cheaper parts? cheaper land? ahhh cheap labor perhaps...

    14. Re:So what exactly is the problem with this? by chrismcb · · Score: 1

      The school system (or well anyone for that matter) doesn't have a right to your identifying information. They don't have a right to your fingerprints, your retina scan, your dna. That is what is wrong with it.

  17. Re: Beck by transporter_ii · · Score: 2

    Glenn Beck loves big government, as long as it is bombing people he doesn't like or arresting them for drugs that he doesn't like. The deficit? It is horrible, just horrible, unless they are printing up money for war.

    He had a real chance to make a real difference with Ron Paul, with hours to talk about him on the radio...but the few times he mentioned him was to crap all over him. Oh the ironies that Beck just likes the Constitution when it works in his favor.

    A pox on him.

    --
    Doctors destroy health, lawyers destroy justice, universities destroy knowledge, religion destroys spirituality
  18. No big deal by Archangel+Michael · · Score: 2

    Schools can say it was for "Reproductive Health" reasons.

    No, there is no concern about over reaching governance!

    --
    Agent K: A *person* is smart. People are dumb, stupid, panicky animals, and you know it.
    1. Re:No big deal by ColdWetDog · · Score: 1

      Schools can say it was for "Reproductive Health" reasons.

      I guess that lends credence to the phrase 'being screwed up to your eyeballs'.

      --
      Faster! Faster! Faster would be better!
  19. Just refuse by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    100% sure I would have refused this in High School and Middle School. Too bad about the young kids who don't know any better, though.

  20. Next up cameras monitored by Indians by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Next up, it will be cameras watched (or not) by Indian outsource workers, gotta make sure they wash their hands, sit up straight and pay attention in class.

    Micromanaging moron for a head teacher.

  21. Okay? by Murdoch5 · · Score: 1

    I'm going to break this down into a few questions and statement: 1) You know what I really like about this kind of argument is when a few years later a kid gets kidnapped and the one thing they're missing are fingerprints! 2) Why weren't the kids smart enough to ask why? In Kindergarten I would of spoken up and said No. 3) Why does anyone care? So they have an iris scan, what good is it to them if you never do anything wrong! In one way it's a really good thing they took these because now they can automatically exclude innocent parties from being accused. It's like genetic profiling, you only hold back from getting a genetic test done if your guilty or an idiot, the innocent offer them up in heart beat and never look back.

    1. Re:Okay? by Jason+Levine · · Score: 1

      You know what I really like about this kind of argument is when a few years later a kid gets kidnapped and the one thing they're missing are fingerprints!

      In New York State, we have this thing called the Safe Child Card. (It might be available in other states.) The police will set up a booth at local events or you go to your nearest police station. Your child weighs in, you measure their height, you fill out a form, and then they take your child's photo and fingerprints. You get a card with your child's information and fingerprints printed on it. The information goes into a database. If your child is reported missing, this information is called up and spread to every police department. No searching for photos or trying to obtain fingerprints after the fact. No gathering the information from parents who are, understandably, too shaken up for details. (How tall was little Johnny? 35 inches tall? 38? 40? When your kid goes missing, details like that don't just spring to mind.)

      Plus, this is completely voluntary. If you are opposed to this, you can skip it. For me and my wife, though, we like the peace of mind it gives us knowing that the police would get a head start on finding our boys should they go missing. (Of course, we hope that we never need to use them.)

      If this program stopped by the school and signed kids up (with parental approval, of course), I'd fully support it. Iris scans to prove class attendance is an answer to a non-existent problem, though.

      --
      My sci-fi novel, Ghost Thief, is now available from Amazon.com.
    2. Re:Okay? by kermidge · · Score: 1

      "It's like genetic profiling, you only hold back from getting a genetic test done if your guilty or an idiot, the innocent offer them up in heart beat and never look back."

      No. It's mine and you can't have it. If you are in custody no permission is necessary - they will get a sample by force. If you're on probation or parole, they will coerce you - "give us a sample or go back in." They may also charge you for it, as much as $1200 in my area.

      I will voluntarily give a DNA sample when the tech exists, and I can afford it, to reliably make and install replacement parts for failing ones.

    3. Re:Okay? by Murdoch5 · · Score: 1

      In Ontario we had this same thing when I was growing up and still to this day I support it.

    4. Re:Okay? by Murdoch5 · · Score: 1

      I disagree, you don't have to worry about saying no when you have nothing to hide. Innocent people don't offer up tests that they know will screw them. The more you say no and the more you try to hide in the shadows the more guilty you always look.

    5. Re:Okay? by chrismcb · · Score: 1

      I thought you were being sarcastic, but I think you are actually being sincere. If a parent wants their child fingerprinted, then the parents can fingerprint the child. The school can't. Why aren't the kids smart enough to ask why? Perhaps we can look at the recent incident where the teacher got in trouble for talking about the students rights. The kids don't know. And it isn't their job to know. They are children after all. The adults are supposed to protect them. So they have an iris scan, what good is it if you never do anything wrong? Well I guess that depends on what you define as "wrong" And that is the problem. "They can automatically exclude innocent parties" I'm not so sure they can, but that isn't a reason for you to give up your rights. "You only hold back from getting a genetic test if you are guilty or an idiot" Well no, you also hold back because you know your rights. I don't have to incriminate myself, even if I didn't do it, I'm not giving anything up. I'm not an idiot, it is just my right.

    6. Re:Okay? by chrismcb · · Score: 1

      s the more guilty you always look.

      So what? Then I look guilty. It is MY right to say No when I have nothing to hide. So I say no.

    7. Re:Okay? by celle · · Score: 1

      "...) Why does anyone care? So they have an iris scan, what good is it to them if you never do anything wrong! In one way it's a really good thing they took these because now they can automatically exclude innocent parties from being accused. It's like genetic profiling, you only hold back from getting a genetic test done if your guilty or an idiot, the innocent offer them up in heart beat and never look back."

      Only a simple response is needed. Corruption, if they want of get you, you're giving them ammo to falsely accuse you.

  22. I have done no such thing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Insightful

    The problem is that I'm not the one "trading" my freedom for security. The concept is illogical. But wait, you say. You've been taught your entire life that each citizen voluntarily "trades" his freedom for the benefits of being subject to coercive authority. In other words, a citizen volunteers to be subject to coercion. (This is precisely what the "social contract" theory claims when reduced to its core meaning.) Read over that a few times, and see if you can spot the problem. Hint: This will require you to think for yourself.

    Here's the problem. The two modes of human interaction, voluntary association and coercion, are mutually exclusive and polar opposite -- that is exactly what gives them meaning. If coercion occurs, then voluntary association is absent -- by definition. If voluntary association occurs, than coercion is absent -- by definition.

    A man cannot volunteer himself to be subject to coercion, just as he cannot force (coerce) another man into volunteering.

    Therefore it is impossible to "trade" or "forfeit" one's freedom. This is more than just semantics. This is a law of human nature, and the laws of human nature cannot be changed through force of arms (i.e. government).

    1. Re:I have done no such thing by lexsird · · Score: 1

      Your logic is erroneous, human equations aren't black and white, but mostly shades of grey. Force of arms is the only real and true power of our species. As much as any element wishes to rise above this, they will be forced back to it by other human elements. Only in it's complexity can such erroneous logic arise that there is an alternative. If you distill it down, you will find that in the end, it's by force of arms that all order and rules are established with any sustain.

      The world is a small place these days and becoming smaller by the nanosecond.

      --
      Take the Red Pill.
    2. Re:I have done no such thing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You didn't prove that my logic is erroneous. You merely stated that the world is dominated by coercive authority, always has been, and possibly always will be. And I agree. My logic doesn't deny the fact that coercive authority rules the world. My logic denies the supposed justification of coercive authority. Does that mean I am going to disobey coercive authority from now on? Of course not. I am well aware of the consequences of disobeying my masters.

      My logic says that what truly "justifies" coercive authority is physical force, not voluntary agreement. If government was voluntary, then logically, they wouldn't need the power of coercion in order to achieve their goals.

      Now go ahead and prove me wrong.

    3. Re:I have done no such thing by uniquename72 · · Score: 1

      The flaw in your logic is that you believe "freedom" and "voluntary association" is the same thing, and that they are absolute. Neither is true.

      If I choose voluntarily to be locked up in prison, I lose any number of freedoms I had before. For example, I may no longer have the freedom to eat when I please, or go outside whenever I want to.

      I have traded those freedoms in exchange for something else I want more -- to be in a prison.

  23. This is ridiculous... by realsilly · · Score: 1

    I'm all for parents and schools knowing who is getting on the bus and such, as a basic answer to the age old question "Do you know where your kids are right now?" question. But this is insane. Are there really that many kids that a bus driver or school has to have Bio-metric information on their students? Is that data destroyed when the student leaves the school to go to another school, drops out, or graduates? Who else has access to such data? It's bad enough that there are smart chips in Student ID's but crap is getting out of hand.

    Parents, it's time for more of you to Home School.

    --
    Life takes interesting turns, but the most interest is when you're off the beaten path.
  24. Outraged won't fix the problem by sl4shd0rk · · Score: 1

    Stop giving up your civil liberties so readily everytime the news starts churning out the Terrorism drama with every "think of the children" campaign. Life is always going to have it's dangers and none of the DHS/TSA stuff to date has saved us from any of it*. The only reason TFA has happened is because people let it happen.

    [*] - http://www.schneier.com/blog/archives/2012/01/abolish_the_dep.html

    --
    Join the Slashcott! Feb 10 thru Feb 17!
    1. Re:Outraged won't fix the problem by chrismcb · · Score: 1

      Outraged won't fix the problem

      Stop giving up your civil liberties so readily .... The only reason TFA has happened is because people let it happen.

      Well if people are outraged, maybe they'll do something about it. You did read how the parents are outraged, after the children's rights were violated. Did you see how the parents didn't GIVE up their children's rights. Outrage is a start. I don't see what you are complaining that the parents were outraged.

  25. Re:s/Freedom/nothing/g by darkonc · · Score: 4, Insightful
    Security?? WHAT security?

    If some kid is intent on shooting the driver and everybody else on the bus, do you really think (s)he's gonna stop for an eye exam before going hog wild?

    And if it's some PTSD-suffering ex-marine blowing up the bus, it's gonna be the same situation -- even if the attacker DOES stop to look in the scanner.

    In this case, you get NOTHING for your lost freedom: no security, no safety, no real knowledge after the fact ...

    NOTHING

    --
    Sometimes boldness is in fashion. Sometimes only the brave will be bold.
  26. Its security evolution and nothing more. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    We went from no security, to truant officers, to having photos on file, to security cameras, schools with picture ID's and so on. This is just another step in school security and nothing more. It doesn't share personal information at all, its like a fingerprint which every student openly leaves everywhere anyhow.

    Schools have to take care of hundreds of minors everyday that increasingly become more hostile and security risks. And with the ability to be sued for every single little thing I see this as them trying to protect themselves better while protecting the kids better.

  27. No, that was pertinent. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Your problem is it was devastating to your case.

    The iris scans were NOT DATA before they were scanned in.

    But you're not really smart enough to get that because you have a hobby horse you're riding like there's no tomorrow: the statement "Data wants to be free" is that once you start sharing data, you can't stop it without huge problems: it wants to be free.

    But that means that when you voluntarily share information (for example, by selling copies of a book you wrote), the data you wrote is now free. Before you published, that wasn't data that you had to put much effort into keeping closed up. If you don't want the data to be shared, don't share it.

    Here, the iris scans, EVEN IF THEY ARE DATA, ***did not want*** to be collected in the first place. This is the equivalent of burgularizing your home to get the draft copy of your book and making copies of it to give away.

    THAT was theft.

    SO IS THIS.

  28. Well, both the contractor and the school are happy by fufufang · · Score: 3, Insightful

    This iris scan device is expensive, ineffective and excessive.

    But there are money for the contractors, bribe for the school administrators. Everyone is happy, right?

  29. Re:s/Freedom/nothing/g by serviscope_minor · · Score: 4, Insightful

    If some kid is intent on shooting the driver and everybody else on the bus, do you really think (s)he's gonna stop for an eye exam before going hog wild?

    And even if he does stop for the eye exam what will it confirm? The columbine killers were both students at the school they shot up (surprise!), so such a system wouldn't have stopped them.

    Database thinks, yep, Harris and Klebold are on the bus.

    --
    SJW n. One who posts facts.
  30. They're doing something wrong ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    They're doing something wrong if they need this type of security. Kids go to the same school at the same time five days a week. If the driver can't recognise a student it's either because they're playing around with staffing too much or they're mucking around with schedules too much. Or maybe employee morale is so low that they don't care enough about the kids to know when something is amiss, like the kid didn't get on or off the bus for at the right place (or to come forward to the police if a kid goes missing).

  31. Creating a problem where none exists by DeathGrippe · · Score: 1

    This kind of imposed "security" measure generally fails to provide any additional security, while at the same time treating children as criminals.

    People treated as criminals, frequently respond by becoming so and thus provide continuing justification for the "security" measures that caused the problem in the first place.

  32. Re:s/Freedom/nothing/g by lexsird · · Score: 1

    Of course there is gain, but I don't think we like where it is going. Take a look at the movie "Minority Report" and the daily mechanics of interaction with technology it portrayed. An iris scan was a fast biometric measure they could track every aspect of a person with, where they were, what they purchased, what interested them.

    Think of how entities such as Amazon track our browsing of products and try to anticipate our needs, making suggestions for us. Think of this expanded to every aspect of life. Everything about you will end up in a file and that file will be accessible by whom? I have the presumption that we are all arriving late to the party on this subject. I suspect that vast amounts of data on us all have been farmed, done secretly and who has it and what they do with it would disturb us.

    --
    Take the Red Pill.
  33. HaHa - $60 to fill your tank! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Try the equivalent of $106 to fill your tank here in the UK...

  34. Iris is a spherical muscle by kencurry · · Score: 1

    Changes constantly, as it is what controls pupil size. Don't get how this would be very good at positive ID, especially if lighting is a variable.

    --
    sigs are for losers (except to point out that sigs are for losers)
  35. Where's the [money]? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So, with almost no money going to any school anywhere in the US, so much so that students are being pushed through when they should really be held back just to grab a little extra cash to keep things moving...How is anyone going to afford to pay for retinal scanners on the school buses? Let alone the training that will be required for the bus drivers...

  36. Iris scan vs. photo-ID by Roger+W+Moore · · Score: 1

    It is information from the moment I write it down.

    Actually it is information the moment the thought pops into your head. It is just not accessible to others until you write it down or say it. I am curious about the fuss with iris scans though. This is nothing more than a detailed photograph and in many ways a lot better than a photo because you can't scan someone's iris to identify them without them being aware of it unlike facial recognition. Also, unlike finger prints, you do not leave iris prints everywhere you go so it cannot be used to track where you have been or what you have done. Frankly iris scans are even better privacy-wise than a photo-ID card.

    1. Re:Iris scan vs. photo-ID by GoogleShill · · Score: 1, Insightful

      The book Database Nation, published in 2000, shows a shocking set of pictures where a pole-mounted camera was able to perform iris recognition on a person driving 60 MPH down the freeway. That's at least 13 year old technology.

      So yes, iris recognition can be used to track people in public areas, without their knowledge.

    2. Re:Iris scan vs. photo-ID by GoogleShill · · Score: 1

      Oh, I love the mods today. All I post is a verifiable fact and I get modded down. Thanks asshole!

  37. Expiring ID by MDMurphy · · Score: 1

    If it's true that the iris patterns change significantly as children grow, then this would seem then to be a good thing to use for ID kids from the perspective that the ID method would "expire" after some period, making it no longer useful after the original reason no longer exists. This would be different/better than fingerprints that would be useful forever.

    This is not to suggest that that I'm necessarily in favor of mandatory biometric ID screening. But if there was a biometric indicator that was reliable and also "expired" after a year or to, that would be awfully handy. If you voluntarily used that form of ID for a temporary purpose you wouldn't be handing over a permanent key.

    1. Re:Expiring ID by Aryden · · Score: 1

      Until they have an evolving database of biometric data. So your kids gets their iris scanned once a year from the time they start school to the time they finish school. Presumably, this is a 12 year period being k-12. So now this company has the data going back 12 years. There are many many many things that can go wrong here. As a database developer myself, I can assure you that data gets corrupted, data gets entered incorrectly etc.

      So one day, the police say, hey we have this big database of iris scans just waiting for us to tap. They get their warrant, they compare iris scans and behold there is a possible match to this suspected bank robber. But here is the problem, the iris scan, taken when the kid was 6 years old, was accidentally labelled as being their 12th grade scan. So now, the cops go arrest this guy based on decades old data that is actually incorrect. Biometric data can't lie, so he must have done it and his alibi is false because, hey we have evidence to prove it was him.

      The other problem here is the indoctrination issue. Forcing things like this on kids is indoctrinating them to believe that their private information can be taken from them at any time "for the good of the people". So that, when they are grown, they are so used to it and so okay with it, that the government can essentially throw the 4th amendment out because hey, it's for the good of the people.

  38. The proper thing for these parents to do by Rene+S.+Hollan · · Score: 1

    The proper thing for these parents to do is organize, arm themselves, head down to the school administration buildings, and kill every official, employee, and agent in sight. If the school board members are not there, hunt them down, and kill them too.

    No doubt, that would result it an armed SWAT response, arrests, and deaths.

    It would not be legal.

    But, it would be proper, and therefore should be legal. Specifically, it should be an affirmative defense against the charge of murder that the slain (a) be an (1) elected member of government, (2) employee or (3) other agent thereof; and (b) (1) had committed, (2) passed into law, or (3) supported the passage into law of (c) an unconstitutional measure that (d) was (1) applied, or (2) applicable, to the accused. In this case, the students', and by extention their parents' fourth amendment rights were violated.

    Governments are supposed to exist at the pleasure of the people and be their servant, not the other way around.

    The founding fathers didn't go far enough with the second amendment. They had the right idea, that in extremis, armed rebellion against a tyrannical state was justified. But, they failed in thinking a separation of powers and enumerated restrictions on government powers, would be sufficient to ward off that necessity. So, now we are left with a society that has no idea when to take up arms against the state, save the vague notion of "when enough others do". And so, we just sit and look at one another. When the time comes (and, it will), the response will not be a gentle local reminder of who's the boss, but rather a widespread revolution that runs a clear danger of leaving a power vacuum, as revolutions tend to do.

    It would have been far better for there to be a "rulebook" as it were, that clearly enumerates, but not in an exhaustive sense, when to kill an agent of the state.

    Government is best viewed as a beast of burden: useful for a time, but to be put down when it has outlived it's usefulness, or otherwise become ornery.

    Trust no agent of the state who is not willing to enumerate a number of actions that, if they undertook, would justify their killing under the affirmative defense of protecting constitutional rights.

    Radical? Obviously, I don't think so. Affirmative defenses are not legal "walks in the park". They shift the burden from the state having to prove guilt beyond a reasonable doubt to the accused having to prove innocence under the specific affirmative defense shield, having admitted to comitting the act under consideration.

    --
    In Liberty, Rene
  39. But.. but...the CHILDREN!!!! by sconeu · · Score: 1

    Won't *somebody* think of THE CHILDREN?????

    --
    General Relativity: Space-time tells matter where to go; Matter tells space-time what shape to be.
  40. Where does the line start... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Where does the line start for eye tatoos?

  41. Re:So let's give 'em *MORE* tax money! YAY!!!! by cusco · · Score: 1

    Actually Shrub did kill Americans with drone attacks, he just went ahead and did it rather than attempt to legally justify it like Obama so the story went away with the next news cycle.

    --
    "Think about how stupid the average person is. Now, realise that half of them are dumber than that." - George Carlin
  42. Re:s/Freedom/nothing/g by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Besides your irreverent comment regarding war veterans, I'd like to point out that honorably discharged Marines are never referred to as ex-Marines, but rather, the term Marine. Also, the term marine, when applied to a United States Marine is always capitalized.

  43. Anybody else worked IT at a gradeschool? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Most grade schools have horrible networks and network security. Storing this kind of information in them is ridiculous. Not to mention doing this without parents' consent is also ridiculous.

  44. Make sure it's the right kind of scanner by dietdew7 · · Score: 0

    I thought it said rectal scanner and had a tough time getting my single brown eye against the glass.

  45. Beat the system. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    PROTIP: Wear sunglasses.

  46. This technology sucks. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It doesn't work. Never reads.

    Full disclosure: I'm Asian.

  47. Re:s/Freedom/nothing/g by Aryden · · Score: 1

    has nothing to do with whether a kid is going to shoot up a bus, it is purely for tracking purposes so they can monitor the kid's movements.

  48. Re:s/Freedom/nothing/g by Aryden · · Score: 1

    Database thinks, yep, Harris and Klebold are on the bus.

    I see what you did there, H&K thank you for the free ad.

  49. Jewish supremacists... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Who is behind all of this? Who is turning the United States into a police state? Why, it's your 'friends' the JEWS, the Jews who run the Federal Reserve, who print money out of thin air, lend it to their 'cattle', and make you do REAL work to pay back that counterfeit money. The Jews who tell Congress what to do, and Congress jumps. The Jews who launch false flag attacks on YOUR people and then get YOU to fight and die in wars to protect shitty little Israel.
    The Jews who opened your borders and flooded your country with third world parasites, who destroy everywhere they move to.

    Had enough yet?

  50. Right Wing Eucational Standards by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And we're surprised in a Republican county?

  51. Re:s/Freedom/nothing/g by gstoddart · · Score: 1

    Then to clarify, this offers no gain or benefit at all to the people whose irises were scanned or those around them.

    Which basically means this boils down to incompetent and overly zealous school officials doing something they had no permission to do and which can only benefit industry and government, but stands to harm the people who were scanned.

    --
    Lost at C:>. Found at C.
  52. Unrequested Tattoos by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is nothing. My mom, born in 1947 lived in Gary, IN until she was 7. In kindergarten, they tattooed the children's blood types onto their stomachs without so much as a warning to the parents let alone permission. This was especially bad since we are Jewish and tattoos are not allowed.

  53. Iris scan for kids? really? by Mozai · · Score: 1

    Last time I saw an iris scanning device (installed at Toronto's international airport for any voyagers that would enter or fly over American airspace...), the devices required people to stand still, put their eye socket over a camera device and look straight ahead without moving their eye.

    In what scenario does a troublemaker on a bus submit to standing in one place, putting their eye over a camera, and keeping their eye still for even the required fraction of a second? How does this procedure stop a troublemaker from causing trouble?

  54. Re: Beck by Jason+Levine · · Score: 1

    It's the same with those "there's no separation of church and state" folks. They love, love, LOVE government mandating religious stuff so long as it is THEIR religious stuff. However, if a publicly funded school waiver is used to send a kid to a Muslim school?!!! SHOCK!!! OUTRAGE!!! HORROR!!!

    --
    My sci-fi novel, Ghost Thief, is now available from Amazon.com.
  55. Encrypted Iris Information by OldSoldier · · Score: 1

    That concern about your iris scan being compromised has me wondering if these systems encrypt the iris information in a manner similar to password encryption. If so it strikes me that the decryption problem **might** be harder because AFAIK the unencrypted iris data is just a string of numbers. So... if compromised it won't fall to a rainbow/dictionary attack. What I don't know is... does this make it any more secure?

    Can someone knowledgeable in both cryptography and whatever parameters are stored about irises in systems like these comment?

    Regarding RFID being replaceable following a compromise... from the other side they're also subject to being stolen and used nefariously that way, a feature that iris's supposedly don't have. (click through to the explanatory video where they make a point about a **live iris**)

    1. Re:Encrypted Iris Information by fermion · · Score: 1
      This is from Bruce Schneier on fooling scanners into thinking you are someone else.

      And this one on not having to hack the database at all.

      This kind of technology is battle of wits. The defensive technology gets more sophisticated, the offensive technology get more effective. The problem always is that the defensive technology has to be global, while the offensive technology can be very local, and very often there is no consequence for probing attacks. For instance, terrorist can effectively test carrying contraband on planes, as there is no consequence for being caught, until they come up with a combination that will make it through.

      Even if one can't fool the scanner with a fake iris, and can't hack the database to steal the biometric(and one would not anyway because there are easier means), that does not mean one can't hack the database, implant a new iris scan of your suicide bomber on top of an existing legitimate record, and then send that terrorist on the bus to create mayhem.

      For something like a school bus, or an airport, trained personel is superior to technological gimmickry. A school bus driver that knows the students may be more expensive, but is also more secure. Agents in the airport trained to identify suspicious behavior is more expensive, but also more secure.

      --
      "She's a scientist and a lesbian. She's not going to let it slide." Orphan Black
  56. Why? To make money. by jeff13 · · Score: 1

    Everyone is going on and on about why this is happening and isn't this stupid. Well, if you want answers, follow the money. Who had the money and influence to make this happen in the first place? Who will make money off this in the future? After all, most of the money flowing around American public schools is corporate privatization efforts that use any and all ugly politics and fear to make a buck.

    You don't really believe that they just made a mistake and didn't inform the parents until a week later, do yas?

    Just to start yas off, Stanley Convergent Security Solutions has so many tentacles in government and corporate interests they make Bond villains look like amateurs.

  57. Re:s/Freedom/nothing/g by Rockoon · · Score: 1

    Of course there is gain

    This isnt how life works. You dont just get to declare things. You wrote 8 sentences, beginning here, but not even for a moment did you even pretend to justify this idea that there is a gain.

    --
    "His name was James Damore."
  58. Re: Beck by Bob+the+Super+Hamste · · Score: 1

    Lets not forget how insistent he is that people need to follow Christian values and live a good Christian life to the point of wanting government to mandate specific Christian values. For someone who is small government he sure seems to want government to enforce a specific religious code.

    --
    Time to offend someone
  59. Biometric school bus security? by Cid+Highwind · · Score: 1

    Biometric school bus security???

    Seriously, what the unholy fuck has gone wrong with this country?

    --
    0 1 - just my two bits
  60. Read more.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This was stupid in the first place. But your post is more stupid. Kids are still growing and changing, even faster than age affects adults. Taking iris scans from kids is simply a waste of time as you'll be forced to do it every year if not more often. False negatives will be a constant source of problems and after 3 years they'll just stop using this system because "it's too buggy and never worked right" when in reality they got snowed, it never would have worked like they wanted.

    http://tech.slashdot.org/story/12/05/26/0452215/a-wrinkle-for-biometric-systems-irises-change-over-time

    btw you already have a human barcode, 10 of them, at the end of your arms, leaving imprints of their pattern on everything you touch. The "man" would much rather have those, and your DNA, for verifying your identity and tracking you everywhere.

  61. The End by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It now seems to be an inevitable conclusion that all forms of government, no matter how they start off, all end up in the same state. You know what it is...by any name it is all the same.

    I can think of no other solution than to destroy it and start over. A painful course, but the question is, how easily can it be done with all the wondrous technology that we (for) now posses?

    The elites talk frequently of culling population. So maybe it's time for the population to talk of culling the elites? Not for money or power(though that would be a bonus..) but for the well being and survival of all.

  62. Parents by R3d+M3rcury · · Score: 1

    Agreed. It's not about security--it's about tracking and CYA.

    Currently, the school doesn't know who gets on the bus and where they get off the bus.

    FTA:

    "There's not a day goes by that we get a frantic call from parents that they can't find their child. It's never been a serious situation."

    [...] A device scans the eye of the student to identify him. Then a text message or email would be sent to a parent letting them know what time their child was picked up and the time the bus arrived at school. The electronic device would also notify parents if their child got off at a different bus stop.

    With this system, the school can say, "Little Johnny got on the bus and got off the bus at stop 12, the corner of Woodward & Burnstein. Go look for your kid around there." Better yet, the school can say, "Check your own fucking e-mail and leave us alone."

    So you have parents who expect the school to keep track of where their kids are--but they don't want the school to actually track the kid because that would be bad/Orwellian.

  63. Problem? by T+Murphy · · Score: 1

    Without a percieved benefit, I agree that the school should not be taking iris scans of the students, but I have to ask: what is the threat posed by the school doing this? What freedom is being given up here?

    I could try to piece together an argument, but I would rather hear from someone that feels strongly about this.

    1. Re:Problem? by chrismcb · · Score: 1

      Do think it is ok for the government to have your fingerprints on file? Even if you have never done anything "wrong?"

  64. Re:s/Freedom/nothing/g by Sarius64 · · Score: 1

    I hope every child on that bus starts a personal suit to coercion under the color of authority against Florida. Last time I checked, only criminals were required to give up their biometrics to the state. Now some Florida moron government employee sees absolutely nothing wrong with violating our children for whatever expense. I wonder if their secret members of the CTA, which has endorsed paying the retirements of children molesters that happen to be union members?

  65. Re:s/Freedom/nothing/g by lexsird · · Score: 1

    I can't help it if you are thick and can't get the gist of what I'm talking about.

    --
    Take the Red Pill.
  66. Re:So let's give 'em *MORE* tax money! YAY!!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    IRS has a duty to investigate that organizations are complying with the qualifications for their tax exempt status. The politics of the organization are irrelevant. These investigations have happened since that classification was created. Tea party groups weren't "singled out" this time any more than liberal groups were under Bush.

    As for extrajudicial killings of US citizens, difficult to say as there is no paper trail on the ones that were kidnapped when they were out of country. And I'd wager the assassination of vocally critical soldiers in the war zone could be considered extrajudicial. (Pat Tillman, being one example). Or how about the outright neglect for the safety of troops in order to maximize corporate profit for the contractors? Maybe they didn't intend to kill so many but it's an obvious outcome of the behavior employed by the government under Bush.

    And then if you're a 9/11 truther you would argue that the folks in the WTC were killed extrajudicially but that's a pretty serious stretch.

  67. The really scary part is how incompetent it sounds by Marrow · · Score: 1

    I mean, if you are placing your -children- in the hands of people that are this incompetent, then you better hope they grow up dumb and never realize it.

  68. "Bus Security" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Security" here is codeword for tracking and monitoring.

    Why don't they just tag students in the ear like live cattle and prod them whenever they mis-behave.

  69. Re:s/Freedom/nothing/g by uniquename72 · · Score: 1

    And he can't help it if you don't bother backing up your statements. I see something about Minority Report, and nothing about any "gain" to be had.

  70. So it's theft? by rsborg · · Score: 1

    This iris scan device is expensive, ineffective and excessive.

    But there are money for the contractors, bribe for the school administrators. Everyone is happy, right?

    This just sounds like theft of public resources. Almost as bad as having a vice squad wrongly bust an autistic high school student for drugs (the school administrators were in on that one too) [1]. Or that case about the school admins who used software to take pictures of their students in their rooms with school laptops [2].

    In all these cases, it's these un-impeachable un-elected school administrators who work with seedy police or corporations and are never punished. Instead, the public pays for unnecessary services, or they pay for unneeded lawsuits.

    What will it take to get these folks fired and put in jail for reckless negligence and/or corruption?

    [1] http://temecula.patch.com/groups/police-and-fire/p/autistic-tvusd-student-wrongly-accused-in-massive-dru6a5c988a16
    [2] http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2010/10/11/lower-merion-school-distr_n_758882.html

    --
    Make sure everyone's vote counts: Verified Voting
  71. Re:s/Freedom/nothing/g by lexsird · · Score: 1

    First about the "gain", someone will gain it, thus "they" will have "gain", it doesn't evaporate. It's probably copied into Christ knows how many databases as we speak. Your browsing history is another big fat bunch of data that gets collected as well. Every mouse click can and probably will be tracked. Data no matter how trivial you think it is, adds up.

    Minority Report, watch it sometime and look at how they used iris scanning EVERYWHERE in it. They had moved even to a cashless society, you walk in, take what you want and it's deducted from your account automatically. That's shopping in the future. When they moved into public transit areas, more scanning, go into a store, scanned, iris scanners everywhere. Your every move cataloged and it was used through out the show to market to your "needs" or to track your ass down if they wanted you.

    That was the whole deal about the protagonist getting new eyes in the movie, so that he could move about without being instantly nailed by an iris scanner.

    When you RTFA (read the fucking article) you will see how this draws parallels to Minority Report. What a wonderful place to start indoctrinating the next generation on being submissive to such tracking methods, in a school. You want safer kids, hire a few more cops. If you want to advance an Orwellian nightmare, buy into this bullshit of "technology will save the day."

    Like I said, there is gain, but I don't think we will like where it leads to.

    --
    Take the Red Pill.
  72. Re:s/Freedom/nothing/g by chrismcb · · Score: 1

    Security?? WHAT security?

    Rob Davis (some senior level support guy) states

    This is an effort to further enhance the safety of our students

    He also mentions it can track when and where the student gets on the bus and to school. So how does this further enhance the safety of the children? Has there been a rash of stoways on the busses? Are they loosing children? About the only thing this can really help with is students voluntarily getting off at the wrong stop.

  73. Attendance, not Security by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    All the posts I have read so far have seemed to think that this is about the security of the students. I highly doubt that this was even the intent; it seems far more likely that this is an attendance tracking system. i.e. It would track if a student got on the bus, then skipped out before entering the school. Presumably it would function a lot like that RFID tracking system we read about it Texas some months ago.

  74. look for the pork by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    We're looking in the wrong direction. This is not a school initiative. It's almost certainly a private company, with ties to the school administration, who develops the iris scanning product and got the school to buy their technology with our money. The school doesn't need this.

    Just like red light cameras, porn scanners in airports and countless other new "technologies", these are pushed by private companies convincing government administrators to buy their product and solve a perceived newly-found "need".

  75. adult iris scans by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    do all the adult staff from janitors to principals have their biometric data collected as a matter of course or is it just that kids are being treated as experimental fodder to get them used to having their rights ignored?

  76. What is wrong with Polk Country?! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    First a girl's science experiment being made a felony and now this? Perhaps they should build a fence around them to contain the crazy, just in case it is contagious.