This is an astonishing petition, created and disseminated within the technology industry, to protest the use of technology to carry out abhorrent policies against Muslim Americans, immigrants, and others who displease the incoming Trump administration. Please read the statement to see the links, recommended readings, and organizations. Some might say that it is too late, that the information is already collected, but it is nonetheless heartening to see so many sign this statement protesting the use of technology to invade privacy and violate human and civil rights.
Our pledge
We, the undersigned, are employees of tech organizations and companies based in the United States. We are engineers, designers, business executives, and others whose jobs include managing or processing data about people. We are choosing to stand in solidarity with Muslim Americans, immigrants, and all people whose lives and livelihoods are threatened by the incoming administration’s proposed data collection policies. We refuse to build a database of people based on their Constitutionally-protected religious beliefs. We refuse to facilitate mass deportations of people the government believes to be undesirable.
We have educated ourselves on the history of threats like these, and on the roles that technology and technologists played in carrying them out. We see how IBM collaborated to digitize and streamline the Holocaust, contributing to the deaths of six million Jews and millions of others. We recall the internment of Japanese Americans during the Second World War. We recognize that mass deportations precipitated the very atrocity the word genocide was created to describe: the murder of 1.5 million Armenians in Turkey. We acknowledge that genocides are not merely a relic of the distant past—among others, Tutsi Rwandans and Bosnian Muslims have been victims in our lifetimes.
Today we stand together to say: not on our watch, and never again.
We commit to the following actions:
We refuse to participate in the creation of databases of identifying information for the United States government to target individuals based on race, religion, or national origin.
We will advocate within our organizations:
to minimize the collection and retention of data that would facilitate ethnic or religious targeting.
to scale back existing datasets with unnecessary racial, ethnic, and national origin data.
to responsibly destroy high-risk datasets and backups.
to implement security and privacy best practices, in particular, for end-to-end encryption to be the default wherever possible.
to demand appropriate legal process should the government request that we turn over user data collected by our organization, even in small amounts.
If we discover misuse of data that we consider illegal or unethical in our organizations:
We will work with our colleagues and leaders to correct it.
If we cannot stop these practices, we will exercise our rights and responsibilities to speak out publicly and engage in responsible whistleblowing without endangering users.
If we have the authority to do so, we will use all available legal defenses to stop these practices.
If we do not have such authority, and our organizations force us to engage in such misuse, we will resign from our positions rather than comply.
We will raise awareness and ask critical questions about the responsible and fair use of data and algorithms beyond our organization and our industry.

Now if we can only get them to do the same with student data collection, eh!
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Duane,
Student data ARE data on race and national origin. They are also data on cognitive ability, and can be linked to genetic data by any fanatic who wins an election. Could this petition be a step toward recognition that any surveillance of public school students in the first place is inherently dangerous?
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I am reminded that about eight years ago there was a sudden push inside our district’s low-income schools to get ALL students, parents and teachers to fill out a specific form asking everyone to identify by race (specific boxes provided). If the form wasn’t returned, you got a second one, and then a third — each one a little more threatening.
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While I am certain some of the people supporting the petition are motivated by their sense of justice and ethics, I wonder how many of them are signing because their companies are protecting H 1B visa holders that have remained here after the expiration their visas. One of the first items from the Silicon Valley CEOs that had a audience with Trump was a request for continuation of H1 B visas, despite Trump’s deportation pledge during the campaign. Tech companies have been replacing trained Americans with H 1Bs, not because they are better trained, because they can pay them pennies on the dollar and make more profit.
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“Tech companies have been replacing trained Americans with H 1Bs, not because they are better trained, because they can pay them pennies on the dollar and make more profit.”
Thank you, that point has to be made over and over.
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The same thing needs to be done to put an end to all databases that collect personal information on the citizen regardless of age, sex, race, ethnicity, country of origin, sexual preference, etc. It is time for government and business to get out of our personal lives. Until we stop all this data collection we will still be a nation of discrimination and segregation. These databases serve absolutely no useful purpose for the betterment of mankind.
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“These databases serve absolutely no useful purpose for the betterment of mankind.” BINGO
Are we to believe the engineers, designers, business executives, and OTHERS, whose jobs include managing or processing data about people,
have SUDDENLY realized their complicity in keeping the
common population on a leash?
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Am I going a step too far to suggest that student data-collection since the Civil Rights Era– “identity politics” as the right likes to call it– plays right into this? Collecting data on ed achievement for minorities seemed like a no-brainer for accountability on equitable delivery of quality education. We have already seen it turned around & used as a tool to undermine the public school system, using ‘insufficient’ ‘gap-closing’ as a cudgel to give bad marks to teachers [/ fire them] and schools [close them]. Further abuses suggested in this petition. Good old anonymous SES categorization seems sufficient for ed stats.
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“Collecting data on ed achievement for minorities seemed like a no-brainer for accountability on equitable delivery of quality education.”
And, B35, what is the main problem with that statement?
If you guessed “ed achievement” go over to the prize table and get yourself a prize.
“Ed achievement”, actually as it is used, “student achievement” is one of the misnomers of educational discourse. The term forces one to think of outcomes and not processes.
The most important aspect of public education is the teaching and learning process which includes the appropriate curriculum needed so that public education may fulfill its primary constitutional mandate “to promote the welfare of the individual so that each person may savor the right to life, liberty, the pursuit of happiness, and the fruits of their own industry” which then allows for obtaining the secondary constitutional consideration of “The stability of a republican form of government depending on the morality and intelligence of the people. . . .”
As Catherine has written about here over the last few days, using business language and business ethics for the public school realm is illogical and a false lens through which to view the success or not of public education.
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Snowden’s Message about Trump’s Election
https://youtu.be/YW9gFgEO67o
Published on Nov 10, 2016
Computer professional Edward Snowden has performed his interview about the current situation in world security. He talks about the results of US President Elections. Edward is considering the wrong side of Trump’s Election. This is the compact version of Snowden’s message! Details in video!
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In other news, here’s ed tech promoting “surveillance of learning” 🙂
Doug Levin @douglevin 1h1 hour ago
Jim Shelton of CZI: Biggest promise of #edtech due to surveillance of learning (understand the 1’s and 0’s of insight) #nyedtechweek
You feel bad for kids. They’re tracked and watched within an inch of their lives. I maintain kids themselves will eventually rebel against these completely insane adults. There has to be some human right to have an untracked thought or expression.
Kids themselves going to have to BACK THESE ADULTS OFF, because no one in this industry has any sense of restraint. I’m confident kids will rebel. No sooner are my son and his friends given some ed tech tracking tool than they immediately go to work throwing a wrench into the gears. It’s delightful, really. I cheer them on 🙂
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Chiara, Jim Shelton was at Gates, then Duncan brought him to US ED. No doubt he landed on his feet via a golden parachute.
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If Bill Gates, stops being the glory hound, of his self-anointed public education rephorm and, he looks at the petition, he may be in a quandary- HB 1 visa employees vs. tech industry-profit opportunity from data mining.
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The intimidators are busy.
For good reasons, the keepers of the Internet Archive are in the process of creating an alternative location for these records, archived since 2009. http://www.computerworld.com/article/3144757/internet/internet-archive-after-trump-win-looks-to-create-alternate-site-in-canada.html
An inquisition mindset appears to be present among some members of the Trump transition team. Check out this report.
Member (s) of Trump’s transition team have targeted individual civil servants http://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2016/12/09/us/politics/document-Trump-Transition-Questionnaire-Energy-Dept.html
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Reblogged this on Lloyd Lofthouse.
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RE: “An inquisition mindset appears to be present among some members of the Trump transition team.” SEEMS?!
The “right” has almost always been wrong – and wrong-headed – about a great deal outside protecting the ability of those in their club to protect personal assets and amass even greater wealth on the backs of others. Republicans have repeatedly made a mess of the financial and social fabric of this country – for which they blame “the liberals” when they inherit those problems.
WHEN will enough so-called “average Americans” wake up and END this “mess it up/attempt to clean it up” cycle by changing their behavior at the polls?
When we have confinement camps once again?
When only the wealthy can afford adequate health care?
When the right to a free and appropriate public education becomes totally meaningless?
After another attempt to repeal the rights of woman?
Would the return of bread lines do it, perhaps?
Those who voted in McDonald and Party can’t ALL have flunked history, can they?
xx,
mgh
(Madelyn Griffith-Haynie – ADDandSoMuchMore dot com)
– ADD Coach Training Field founder; ADD Coaching co-founder –
“It takes a village to transform a world!”
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I am proud to stand with Muslim-Americans. In this time, of renewed religious bigotry, we should all read the letter that General George Washington wrote to the Jews of Newport. See
http://www.tourosynagogue.org/history-learning/gw-letter
“To Bigotry, no sanction”.
and remember the words of Martin Niemoller (Holocaust survivor)
Niemöller is perhaps best remembered for the quotation:
First they came for the Socialists, and I did not speak out—
Because I was not a Socialist.
Then they came for the Trade Unionists, and I did not speak out—
Because I was not a Trade Unionist.
Then they came for the Jews, and I did not speak out—
Because I was not a Jew.
Then they came for me—and there was no one left to speak for me. (END)
All of us should fight against bigotry in any form. It is in our own self-interest.
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