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Mardi 31 juillet 2007

MPs a outragé par l'empreinte digitale d'élève

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Les directives soulèvent des inquiétudes au-dessus de sécurité, de consentement et d'accès

Par Grec de Dinah

MPs ont critiqué de nouveaux conseils de Becta qui montre que les écoles peuvent prendre des empreintes digitales des élèves sans demander d'abord la permission parentale.

Bien que les directives de Becta, l'agence des écoles ICT du gouvernement, écoles de parole « faites participer entièrement les parents dans n'importe quelle décision pour présenter biométrique ou prenez des empreintes digitales la technologie », il n'est pas obligatoire de faire ainsi.

Sous Acte de protection de données il n'y a rien qui exige explicitement des écoles de chercher le consentement des parents avant de mettre en application un système biométrique de technologie, entraînant l'outrage parmi un certain MPs.

Shadow Minister for Schools Nick Gibb said: “This is long-awaited but very disappointing guidance. It is very weak as it neither requires schools to seek parental consent nor recognises the serious issues at stake with schools fingerprinting children simply for administrative convenience. The Government needs to look more carefully at the fundamental principles these issues raise.”

Biometric technologies have been used by some schools for four years to help with cashless lunch queues, school libraries and attendance systems. Benefits cited include speeding up administration processes and cutting down on bullying and the theft of lunch money from pupils.

Although the Department for Children, Schools and Family said it has no figures on how many schools use biometric systems, a survey conducted by the campaigning organisation Leave them Kids Alone shows it is growing rapidly.

LKA has estimated that 3,500 primary and secondary schools now use biometric data systems and that approximately 750,000 children have been fingerprinted by their schools with around 20 new schools a week being added to those figures.

It is mostly fingerprint technology that is used but MPs are concerned that the Government has given little thought to issues of security, consent, keeping the data for longer, or permanently as well as access by other authorities such as the police.

Greg Mulholland Lib Dem Shadow Minister for Schools went so far as to say in a House of Commons debate that “the collection of biometric data by schools is not necessary”. He said using biometric systems utterly outweighed any positive benefits that may ensue.

Becta told Computeractive that if parents or children objected and refused to give their fingerprints, then schools could not force them to comply. A representative told us that if this was the case, the guidelines clearly point out that schools have to offer alternative systems, such as smartcards, to access the same services if pupils want to opt out or their parents object.

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  • This entry was posted on Tuesday, July 31st, 2007 at 4:25 pm and is filed under Surveillance . You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

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