US Minneapolis schools are spying on queer students & outing them to teachers and parents - The software has outed one student and also incorrectly notified a transgender teen's parents after they wrote about their past suicidal thoughts.

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Since spring 2020, Minneapolis schools have been using an online surveillance application called Gaggle to spy on students’ online activity. The software flags LGBTQ-related terms and has already reported outed at least one LGBTQ student to their parents.

Gaggle monitors students’ online behavior 24 hours a day and seven days a week, by tracking their school-issued Google and Microsoft accounts. Such accounts are likely to be used more often by poor students who lack personal home computers.

Gaggle scans students’ “emails, chat messages and other documents, including class assignments and personal files, in search of keywords, images or videos that could indicate self-harm, violence or sexual behavior,” wrote Mark Keierleber, a reporter with The 74, a non-profit, non-partisan news site covering education in the United States.

Gaggle’s moderators then evaluate the flagged content and report any troubling finds to school officials. Officials can then contact a student’s parents or the police.

The response is entirely up to the school, though Jason Matlock—the Minneapolis district’s director of emergency management, safety and security—said the district uses Gaggle to help troubled kids rather than get them into trouble.

Minneapolis has paid more than $355,000 to partner with Gaggle until 2023. The city started using Gaggle as students went entirely online for virtual and distance learning during the ongoing pandemic COVID-19 pandemic. However, most students and parents weren’t even aware that students had started being monitored.


Gaggle flags LGBTQ-related terms like “gay” and “lesbian”, ostensibly to track online pornography. In three-dozen Minneapolis-based incident reports over the last year, Gaggle flagged keywords related to sexual orientation, The 74 reported. Gaggle founder and CEO Jeff Patterson told CBSN AM that LGBTQ terms are included in the software to help protect LGBTQ students from bullying.

The flagging caused an LGBTQ student to be outed to their parents, Aesha Graffunder, a sophomore at Roosevelt High School in Minneapolis told The Southerner, a publication of South High School.

“School administration didn’t talk to [the student with the flag] at all before their parents were called,” Graffunder said.

Gaggle also incorrectly caused a transgender teen’s parents to be notified after they wrote about their past suicidal thoughts in response to a school assignment.

Teeth Logsdon-Wallace, a 13-year-old student, was flagged after he wrote about his past struggles with mental health. Gaggle flagged his mentions of “suicide”, even though his essay discussed how he had recovered from his past suicidality after receiving mental healthcare.

A school counselor contacted Logsdon-Wallace’s parent two days after he turned in the assignment. Logsdon-Wallace called the incident “retraumatizing.”

“I was trying to be vulnerable with this teacher and be like, ‘Hey, here’s a thing that’s important to me because you asked,” Logsdon-Wallace told The 74. “Now, when I’ve made it clear that I’m a lot better, the school is contacting my counselor and is freaking out.”

Discussing Gaggle’s flagging of LGBTQ terms, Logsdon-Wallace added, “When people are just talking about being gay, anything they’re writing would be flagged. They have ‘gay’ flagged to stop people from looking at porn, but one, that is going to be mostly targeting people who are looking for gay porn and two, it’s going to be a false positive because they are acting as if the word gay is inherently sexual.”

Gaggle has claimed that its service potentially saves children’s lives. The company boasts that it saved more than 1,400 lives during the 2020-21 school year. But there isn’t really much research to determine whether Gaggle and other services like it have an overall positive effect on helping kids who experience mental health crises or other troubles.

Last school year, Gaggle flagged over 10 billion student content items nationally. Only 360,000 were sent to district officials, the company said. In a study of content flagged by Gaggle, roughly 75 percent of flagged incidents occurred when students were off campus.

Recently, some Democratic lawmakers wrote letters to Gaggle and other student monitoring companies to explain their business practices, worrying that the nonstop monitoring may violate federal laws about child online privacy.

“Education technology companies have developed software that are advertised to protect student safety, but may instead be surveilling students inappropriately, compounding racial disparities in school discipline and draining resources from more effective student supports,” the lawmakers wrote.

Gaggle also offers an additional paid service, not used by Minneapolis, which offers to connect students with mental health professionals. However, the additional cost of that service could bias Gaggle to refer kids for mental help more often. There are more positive ways to make kids aware of mental health resources, critics say, and the awareness of constant monitoring is making some students less willing to share and explore in their schoolwork.

“Most kids in that situation are not going to share anything anymore and are going to suffer for that,” said Jennifer Mathis, the director of policy and legal advocacy at The Bazelon Center for Mental Health Law in Washington, D.C. “It suggests that anything you write or say or do in school — or out of school — may be found and held against you and used in ways that you had not envisioned.”

Approximately 81 percent of teachers said their schools use monitoring software similar to Gaggle, the Center for Democracy & Technology said, citing a recent survey. As a result, 58 percent of students said they don’t share their “true thoughts or ideas” in electronic school assignments. Approximately 80 percent said they’re more careful about what they search for online, knowing they’re being watched.


 
Teeth Logsdon-Wallace, a 13-year-old student, was flagged after he wrote about his past struggles with mental health. Gaggle flagged his mentions of “suicide”, even though his essay discussed how he had recovered from his past suicidality after receiving mental healthcare.

Discussing Gaggle’s flagging of LGBTQ terms, Logsdon-Wallace added, “When people are just talking about being gay, anything they’re writing would be flagged. They have ‘gay’ flagged to stop people from looking at porn, but one, that is going to be mostly targeting people who are looking for gay porn and two, it’s going to be a false positive because they are acting as if the word gay is inherently sexual.”

it's almost as if they prefer kids to be groomed

oh
 
Gaggle monitors students’ online behavior 24 hours a day and seven days a week, by tracking their school-issued Google and Microsoft accounts.
Nothing creepy about conditioning children to believe that it is perfectly normal for big brother to be watching you around the clock to nip any wrong think in the bud.

Also gaggle? Yes I know what a gaggle is but still not the name I would have gone with for a couple of reasons.
 
"the child named Teeth wanted to kill himself"

how are we shocked? Those parents are the definition of liberal idiot.
Ok turns out Teeth is not only a gender confused she, Teeth is also 13 and thought "Teeth" was an appropriate thing to rename herself. This is something I'd expect of a four year old, but given how troonism is just teenage larping in disguise, this is probably her "I'm totally a real vampire you guys" phase.
 
Ok turns out Teeth is not only a gender confused she, Teeth is also 13 and thought "Teeth" was an appropriate thing to rename herself. This is something I'd expect of a four year old, but given how troonism is just teenage larping in disguise, this is probably her "I'm totally a real vampire you guys" phase.
The Guardian, of all newspapers, seems to have a picture of this Teeth fellow and its as bad as you imagine.

 
  • Agree
Reactions: DerKryptid
Honestly I'm more surprised this is something new. I had thought schools had been doing this for over a decade now. Still absolutely terrifying, especially when you consider it may very well be monitoring everything else on the computers those accounts are used on.
 
Given all the shit we see here on the Farms, I'm not sure that kids should have reasonable expectation of privacy with regards to what they do on the internet. Someone should be watching every move they make to keep them from ending up a troon (like Teeth) or sex trafficked or groomed. I used to think spying on your kid was creepy, now I think parents are negligent if they don't. There are too many creepy fucks out there. You should watch them like a hawk until they are 18.

Besides, this is a lesson they need to learn early. If you do dumb shit on your work computer (and school is basically their version of work), you will get in trouble for it. I can tell you that adults often don't realize that the company can and does spy on everything you do if you are using a company computer. Better to learn that lesson in school than be fired because you were surfing gay porn at work. I had a colleague who got in trouble for that very thing -- and we were in IT and he knew better. Just couldn't go a few hours without seeing some dick, I guess. If adults have poor impulse control, imagine a bunch of hormonal teenagers having unsupervised access to the web.

Honestly I'm more surprised this is something new. I had thought schools had been doing this for over a decade now. Still absolutely terrifying, especially when you consider it may very well be monitoring everything else on the computers those accounts are used on.
There was an instance of a school accessing the web cam outside of school hours. That should never be allowed to happen. Kids often keep those laptops in their bedrooms. You could potentially be engaging in child porn (even if accidentally) if you turn those on at the wrong time. I don't think a school should ever be able to turn on a webcam unless the laptop has been reported stolen. Too many pedos would love to have that kind access.
 
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