I have to agree. Getting people to accept this kind of tracking technology at such a young age may make it more difficult for them to deal with fighting it later (or for them to realize that they should). It should not become the status-quo that the "authorities" in one's life (aside from one's parents) be able to track them with such ease.
What sense of a right to privacy do you think these children will obtain under this circumstance? What is potential gain of this system? and is that potential gain worth what is being sacrificed?
A problem I ran into using RD is that I was unable to redirect the connection to localhost for tunneling the connection through ssh. I read a registry hack that can be performed to allow RD to do it, but it looked like more trouble than it was worth. TightVNC never griped about connecting to localhost:port
I have to agree. Getting people to accept this kind of tracking technology at such a young age may make it more difficult for them to deal with fighting it later (or for them to realize that they should). It should not become the status-quo that the "authorities" in one's life (aside from one's parents) be able to track them with such ease. What sense of a right to privacy do you think these children will obtain under this circumstance? What is potential gain of this system? and is that potential gain worth what is being sacrificed?
A problem I ran into using RD is that I was unable to redirect the connection to localhost for tunneling the connection through ssh. I read a registry hack that can be performed to allow RD to do it, but it looked like more trouble than it was worth. TightVNC never griped about connecting to localhost:port