On Campus, Freedom's Just Another Word for Before Covid
  By  Steve Miller, RealClearInvestigations
  September 28, 2020 realclearinvestigations.com
  Colleges  across the country are using new surveillance tools and following  movements of students to blunt the spread of COVID-19. But while school  administrators say the actions are necessary, civil libertarians fear  the measures may last far beyond the pandemic.  
   At Albion College in Michigan, students are tracked by an  app they are required to download and must  ask permission to leave town.
  Among other precautions, Oklahoma State University is using its  wireless network to track students. Photos above and at top are from  OSU's website.    Oklahoma State University is using its  wireless network to track students, promising to delete all information from the system after  seven days.
   Students at Oakland University in suburban Detroit are asked to wear the  BioButton,  a quarter-sized disk that attaches to the body and provides real-time  health status to the developer, which will report to the administration  anyone showing “early signs” of a coronavirus infection.
   The school initially  made the BioButton mandatory, but backed down after resistance from students, many of whom felt the device was an unnecessary tracking mechanism.
   “This is something straight out of Fahrenheit 451 or 1984,” one student commented on the  Change.org petition that successfully opposed the requirement.
   Universities and colleges have millions of dollars at stake in  keeping students on campus as they grapple with the financial losses  that followed their decision to shut down last spring when the  coronavirus was first detected. Most have now opened dorms – whose fees  are crucial to school budgets -- and many teach a hybrid of in-person  and online instruction.
   More than 50 COVID-19 tracing apps and programs have been released since the pandemic began, according to a  report from Public Citizen.  Some of the technology has been rebranded from other uses and  remarketed as an answer to quelling coronavirus transmission. Other tech  options have been quickly developed and sold, with purveyors making  pitches to schools eager to keep a lid on what they perceive as a threat  to the lives of their students.
   This tracking is separate from the demand by many schools that  students quarantine themselves during their first two or three weeks on  campus. 
   While the quarantines have received little pushback so far, the  surveillance efforts roil some privacy and technology watchdogs, who  claim a number of potential problems with government collection of data.
  Following students with an implied threat for leaving campus without  authorization or attending a party or event that the administration  deems risky, critics say, is closer to surveillance than contact  tracing.
   And the tech adoption policies typically don’t give students a choice with regard to being tracked.
   Gennie Gebhart and her colleagues at the Electronic Frontier  Foundation have researched technology being used by dozens of  universities after hearing from students, who felt they were being  forcefully surveilled.
   “Students at schools where these apps are required were asked to sign  a code of conduct before starting the fall semester,” said Gebhart, who  is the acting activism director at the EFF. “Along with ‘I will not  cheat,’ or ‘I will not plagiarize,’ they also agreed to opt into an app.  It’s not something you can say ‘no’ to if you want to go to school.”
   She points to the University of Massachusetts system, where  students agree  to “download and activate any required UMass approved public health  applications, or access required digital health platforms through web  browsers.”
   UMass spokesman Edward Blaguszewski did not respond to a phone message or email.
   The tracking may be needed, given the health emergency, said Fred  Cate, senior fellow at Indiana University’s Center for Applied  Cybersecurity Research. And if the tech worked, it would likely see  widespread adoption.
   “The biggest issue so far is skepticism that the [apps] work,” Cate  said. “If there were one that worked, and did so consistently, we and  many other universities would use it.”
   Federal coronavirues money is helping driving the effort. The state  of Alabama spent $30 million of its CARES Act funding to develop its own  health monitoring/tracing app.  GuideSafe  is used by the state university system and, once downloaded, it tracks a  student’s movements. It is “voluntary, but strongly suggested and  encouraged,” according to a  university system directive.
   “We call this exposure notification,” said Sue Feldman, a professor  in the School of Health Professions at the University of Alabama at  Birmingham. “It is not tracking or tracing location or movement, we try  to make that very clear. It is a notification app.”
   GuideSafe includes a portal called Healthcheck, which requires  students to report each day whether they have symptoms and if they have  been in contact with anyone with the virus. Students who fail to fill  out and submit the Healthcheck form for three days receive daily emails  and texts from the school. Log-in information and email addresses are  also cross-referenced every time someone signs on to the university’s  Wi-Fi network, which helps to identify scofflaws.
   “When you log in to the system on campus, they know where you log in  from, and if you log in and have not completed Healthcheck, that’s not a  good thing,”  said Feldman, who asserted that despite the personal  messages via email or text. “GuideSafe never knows your name.”
   Universities have  tracked students for years, using  key cards  (which students use to access campus buildings), the university  wireless service and through social media monitoring algorithms, among  other things. 
   At the corporate level, where employees are paid to show up,  mandatory tracking is hard to argue with. College students, in contrast,  are paying tens of thousands of dollars to attend school. Threatened  with the loss of scholarships or even readmission if they decide to take  a semester off, they could face a choice between surrendering to the  school mandates, including tracking, or starting their college career  over again, possibly elsewhere.
   “The power imbalance … for students, is in favor of the [college],”  said Burcu Kilic, director of Public Citizen’s Digital Rights Program.
   One of the schools that demand students download a tracking app this  fall is Albion College, where 1,900 students and parents have signed a  petition to make the use of Aura optional.
   Four other colleges have signed deals to use the app, with 20 more  considering it, said Brian O'Neill, a Philadelphia entrepreneur who  funded Aura.
   “If you are serious about managing the COVID-19 virus for your  population, then our software is for you,” O'Neill told  RealClearInvestigations. “If you aren’t, then we are not for you.”
   He declined to name the potential customers.
   The Aura app provides regular access to students’ location, which the  college contends is needed to track the spread of any exposure.  Students, who  must sign a release  ceding some privacy rights under the Federal Educational Rights and  Privacy Act (FERPA) are alerted if they come in contact with someone who  has tested positive for the virus.
   “There was acrimony in the beginning because students were getting  into this strict protocol,” O’Neill said. ” We just wanted to give  people the opportunity to experience college life.”
   Albion spokesman Chuck Carlson declined to comment.
   The coronavirus threat is expected to subside in the U.S. as vaccines hit the market.
   The tracking apps, though, have no expiration date.
   “You would hope they would stop, but usually, once you cede power to  the state, the state doesn’t give up that power,” said Josh Blackman, a  constitutional law professor at the South Texas College of Law Houston.
   Also looming is the possibility that the data collected now will be “repurposed,” added Kilic of the Digital Rights Program.
   “This [information] is going to be used for the future,” she said.  “They will not stop using this technology. People make money on this and  we are creating an extreme surveillance system.” |