Many NY parents received an email from Commissioner King last week, in
response to their request to opt their children’s personally identifiable
confidential educational records out of the inBloom database and shared with vendors without their consent.
He made it clear that he does not intend to honor any requests from parents to
opt out. Though he claims the purpose of sharing of this highly sensitive data is "preparing all children for college and
careers," according to this Lewisboro news article, Superintendents
are "collectively not thrilled by any means” about the
prospect of the inBloom cloud.
Meanwhile, inBloom answered some questions on a tech blog here, claiming that it remains solely up to states and
districts (their “customers”) to decide whether they will allow parent opt out
or consent. But as recently as
Oct. 2012, Stacey Childress, who is in charge of this project for the Gates
Foundation, wrote: "Under federal law, school districts must
manage and honor parent requests to opt out of programs that require the use of
student data.” Unfortunately this statement seems to have been scrubbed
from the inBloom website.
At the same time, inBloom refuses to reveal how much their
“customers” will be charged for their services – meaning, how much states and
districts will have to pay for the privilege of inBloom collecting, storing on
a data cloud and sharing all this confidential student and teacher data with vendors
-- but we have heard from officials in other states that the fee will be about
$2-$5 per student starting in 2015.
This means NYC will be charged more than $2 million per year; or the
state more than $5 million – with the likelihood that the fees will increase
thereafter. Not to mention the huge
financial liabilities states and districts will face if and when this data
leaks out.
In addition, inBloom says that more states and districts are
expected to sign up to this data sharing plan this year, and that they
are also “exploring
approaches to recover costs from providers who benefit from using our service
to serve their customers.” Their
providers are the vendors; how that is different from selling access to student
data is not clear to me; is it to you? (More Details on InBloom's Plans for Student Data).
Thank you for what you do. I look foward to hopefully meeting you tomorrow night at Hofstra.
ReplyDeleteHere's an interesting take on data use from Aaron Pallas. It makes me furious to read why corporations don't have to worry about privacy safeguards the way researchers do, and angry too that there isn't more about the double standard in national media. http://eyeoned.org/content/whos-afraid-of-big-data_432/#more-432
ReplyDeleteIt was great to hear you speak in person. Yesterday's panel at Hofstra was truly moving. Thank you again.
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