Showing posts with label data privacy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label data privacy. Show all posts

Sunday, February 9, 2014

Justice denied! Slipshod and circular reasoning in the judge's decision on our inBloom lawsuit!

Late Friday afternoon, we learned that Judge Breslin of the NY Supreme Court dismissed the lawsuit to prevent the NY State Education Department from uploading personal student data to inBloom, which in turn plans to share this information to vendors without parental consent. The judge's decision is nonsensical in many ways, as he didn't show how the state's disclosure of personal student data to inBloom was either necessary or specifically authorized by law, as the Personal Privacy Protection Law requires. Instead, his decision exhibits slipshod and circular reasoning.

Despite the chorus of inBloom supporters and others on the Gates payroll who pounced on this decision with glee, the Court did not make any independent judgments on the educational value or security of this information.  Instead, the judge pointed out an exception in the PPPL: that such disclosure can be made "to those who contract with, the agency that maintains the record if such disclosure is necessary to the performance of their official duties pursuant to a purpose of the agency required to be accomplished by statute or executive order or necessary to operate a program specifically authorized by law."  


However, the State did not prove that such disclosure to the contractor, in this case inBloom, was indeed"necessary  to the performance of their official duties" or "necessary to operate a program specifically authorized by law" -- so I'm really not sure how the Judge came to this conclusion, and it seems to be based upon a very slippery argument. 

Moreover, according to the experts that we've spoken to, the contractor would itself be bound by the PPPL law and thus required to protect privacy to the same extent as the State Education Department.  This means that inBloom could not redisclose any personal data to vendors, including the dashboard providers, without parental consent.

The only real discussion of this issue by the judge in his decision is on p. 15, where he says that the "determination...to utilize a third party vendor to design and effectuate the portal and the dashboard systems" was "not unlawful" as it was made to "carry out the duties of the agency which is promote and further the educational process and supervise all public schools." 

So that the disclosure to a contractor, namely inBloom, is allowed "inasmuch as disclosure is necessary to the performance of respondents' official duties."   Because SED says it is done to carry out its "duties," therefore it is "necessary" and the PPPL does not apply?  Why have a law that restricts the actions of state agencies to disclose personal information unless it is "necessary," and then defer blindly to the agency whenever it claims that such disclosure is needed to perform its duties?

How do we know that disclosing this data to inBloom is unnecessary? No other state is providing its student data to inBloom, even states that received considerable Race to the Top funds.  No other state is outsourcing its entire student longitudinal record system to a private corporation, as far as we know.  The vast majority of New York school board members have opposed the disclosure of this inforrmation to inBloom, as does nearly every Superintendent who has spoken out on this issue.

The state itself says it will not upload the data to the inBloom cloud until at least April, because of contractor delay, and that it will take two months after that until the dashboards are fully operable, which means that it will be at least June until they are working.   

Ken Wagner's affidavit adds the salient fact that in "September 2014, the State's RTTT funding ends if we are unable to obtain an extension...At that point NYSED's rols as subsidizing and serving as a marketplace for...dashboard services will end and inBloom must delete all the data that we have given them."

NYSED also admits that even if they do get an extension, inBloom will start charging for its services in January 2015 -- and that they may have no budget to pay for it when it does. At that point as well, districts would have to pay separately for the dashboards, and none have so far said that they intend to do so. 

So that at most, there would be four months during the school year -- September to December 2014, and possibly even less time -- when the dashboards populated from the inBloom cloud would be operational.  Is uploading the most sensitive information of every public school student in the state onto a data cloud a rational decision, so that dashboards may operate for four months at most?  Is it really necessary for the performance of SED's official duties?  This shows how absurd, arbitrary and reckless this determination of Commissioner King--and Judge Breslin's rubberstamp opinion -- really is.

As we pointed out, the state had violated several other provisions of the Personal Privacy Law,including never having submitted a privacy impact statement in over thirty years, which is required by law.  This privacy impact statement is supposed to provide details as to what personal data every state agency are collecting and which of this data are being provided to  third parties,  under what legal justification,. NYSED also never appointed a privacy officer, as the law calls for as well.  Finally, the SED never established any rules governing the retention or disposal of the data supplied to inBloom, which also violates the PPPL . 

The Judge did not disagree, but the fact that Ken Wagner, (who I guess by default is SED's privacy officer!) did finally submit a privacy impact statement in December in response to our lawsuit, no matter how incredibly inadequate and late the statement is, seems to have satisfied him.  (See Wagner's laughably incomplete statement and the accompanying spreadsheet, especially vague as to who the state may decide to share this information with and under what authority and conditions.)

The Judge also noted that Wagner finally provided information in hisstatement as to the disposal and destruction of this information. Wagner now says that inBloom will be required to destroy all the data when students graduate from high school, but that all of their personal data will be then transferred to the State archives for at least eight years following graduation,with uncertain restrictions on access and an indefinite time line for disposal-- which in itself seems to violate the strict conditions laid out in the PPPL. 

Never mind. We will continue fighting for laws, namely A.6059A, passed unanimously by the Assembly last session and now introduced in Senate S.5932,  that would put strict limits on the state's ability to share any personal information with third parties, and would  prohibit any vendor from redisclosing such information to third parties without parental consent, as inBloom plans to do. 

As the leaders of both parties have come out strongly against the state’s plan to share such sensitive student information with inBloom, I believe that they will never allow the Commissioner to go ahead with this unwarranted and massive violation of student privacy.

Monday, October 14, 2013

Commissioner King says Class Size Matters is a "special interest" manipulating parents

Over the weekend, NY State Education Commissioner John King cancelled all future PTA-sponsored forums about the Common Core, because he claimed that these meetings have been "co-opted by special interests" whose goal is to "dominate" these meetings, and that "parents don't deserve to be manipulated and dominated." His entire statement is quoted here.

Today, a spokesperson from the NY State Education Department identified to reporters these "special interests" as NYSUT (the state's teacher union) and Class Size Matters.  I explained yesterday why it was absurd to say parents are being "manipulated" by  NYSUT, but I was absolutely flabbergasted to hear that King is claiming this about Class Size Matters as well.

I assume that he is referring to our efforts to inform parents around the state that their children's most personal information is being shared with inBloom Inc. and other vendors without their consent, and our advocacy to try to stop this from happening.  One question read from a card at the PTA forum in Poughkeepsie meeting on Thursday referred to these plans (see this video at about 41 minutes in.).

Yet the idea that parents' concerns about this data-sharing plan results from their being "manipulated" is so absurd it is difficult to even comprehend.  So far six out of nine states have pulled out of inBloom or put their plans on hold because of protests from privacy experts and parents in Louisiana, Georgia, North Carolina, Kentucky, Delaware, and Massachusetts; did Class Size Matters manipulate all of them?

In Jefferson County Colorado, the only district participating in that state, the Superintendent announced that parents will be allowed to opt out of their children's data from being shared with inBloom. Last spring, the NY State Assembly  passed two bills to prevent this unregulated personal student data sharing without consent, and most of the candidates for NYC Mayor announced they opposed this as well.  Were all these people being "manipulated"? 

Commissioner King's claim is not only insulting to parents; it reveals how out of touch he is.  He seems unable to comprehend how parents' desire to protect their children's privacy is rational and to have the right to decide with whom their children's most sensitive information, including their names, addresses, test scores, disabilities and disciplinary records, is being shared is completely justified. NY State Allies for Public Education has called for King's resignation.  See the video below.


Monday, January 28, 2013

Data Privacy Day: send a message to the NY State Ed today, demanding that your child's data NOT be shared with private corporations

UPDATE:  See the great letter Sen. Liz Krueger just sent to Commissioner King about this issue, here and below.

Dear Parents:  Today is Data Privacy Day.    Here are some questions you can ask your school about your child’s private education records.
Unfortunately, we already know that NY State intends to share the most private information from your child’s educational records with the Shared Learning Collaborative, a project of the Gates Foundation, without your consent, who in turn intends to hand it over to private for-profit companies.
This information is supposed to include your child’s name, test scores, grades, disciplinary and attendance records, special education status and much more. The information will be put on a data cloud run by Amazon.com, with a system built by Wireless Generation, owned by Rupert Murdoch and run by Joel Klein.  Here is a fact sheet about this issue

Please email State Ed Commissioner John King today, with a copy to Chancellor Walcott and Stacey Childress of the Gates Foundation, demanding that your child’s information NOT be shared with ANY third parties, including the Gates Foundation.  Also copy the email to Michele Cahill of the Carnegie Corporation, which is supposedly in charge of the long-term governance and business plan for a new, separate corporation that will soon take over the project from the Gates Foundation.


Dear Commissioner King:
As a NYC public school parent I demand that you NOT share any of my child’s confidential information with ANY third parties, including the Gates Foundation or ANY other private entity or corporation.  I do not give my consent.
Instead, I ask that you hold public hearings in NYC to explain the purpose of this project, offer all New York parents the right to consent as the law requires, and inform the public who will be legally and financially responsible if this highly sensitive data leaks out or is used in an unauthorized fashion.

Yours,
Signed: [Your Name and address]

Parent [or legal guardian] of [your Child’s full name, grade and school]