The respected organization Human Rights Watch issued a damning report about the widespread violation of children’s rights when they were required to use online instruction. Without their knowledge or their parents’ consent, children in many countries were subject to surveillance by online tracking devices embedded in their online programs.
Governments of 49 of the world’s most populous countries harmed children’s rights by endorsing online learning products during Covid-19 school closures without adequately protecting children’s privacy, Human Rights Watch said in a report released today. The report was released simultaneously with publications by media organizations around the world that had early access to the Human Rights Watch findings and engaged in an independent collaborative investigation.
“‘How Dare They Peep into My Private Life?’: Children’s Rights Violations by Governments that Endorsed Online Learning during the Covid-19 Pandemic,” is grounded in technical and policy analysis conducted by Human Rights Watch on 164 education technology (EdTech) products endorsed by 49 countries. It includes an examination of 290 companies found to have collected, processed, or received children’s data since March 2021, and calls on governments to adopt modern child data protection laws to protect children online.
We think our kids are safe in school online. But many of them are being surveilled, and parents have often been kept in the dark. Kids are priceless, not products….
Of the 164 EdTech products reviewed, 146 (89 percent) appeared to engage in data practices that risked or infringed on children’s rights. These products monitored or had the capacity to monitor children, in most cases secretly and without the consent of children or their parents, in many cases harvesting personal data such as who they are, where they are, what they do in the classroom, who their family and friends are, and what kind of device their families could afford for them to use.
Most online learning platforms examined installed tracking technologies that trailed children outside of their virtual classrooms and across the internet, over time. Some invisibly tagged and fingerprinted children in ways that were impossible to avoid or erase – even if children, their parents, and teachers had been aware and had the desire to do so – without destroying the device.

Why even bother getting upset??? Not much longer and we’ll even have to mind and check out our toilet paper rolls. What a SICK Western world this is becoming…
LikeLike
Yes, as opposed to the super-healthy Eastern world.
LikeLike
Remote instruction itself violated children’s rights.
LikeLike
It has been credibly estimated that at least 300,000 Americans died needlessly because they had not been vaccinated just in the time since vaccines have been made available. That estimate may well be low and does not take into account similar deaths throughout the world. We have crossed one million deaths since March 2020. Please let us know the empirical equation is in which the “violation” of children’s rights is equal to the acceptable numbers of deaths in order to make sure they aren’t “violated.” Are an additional one million deaths worth the lessening of this “violation”? Two million? What’s the number?
We are living in unprecedented times in which ideas that may have significantly alleviated the effects of COVID have been declared illegal and those which have accelerated its spread have been promoted or allowed to proliferate. In that time, well meaning people have made mistakes and not-so-well meaning people have been given legitimacy by large numbers of the population. One would expect if you were living in Ukraine that you would be complaining about why schools aren’t meeting and what a horrible effect THIS action has on children. Kid live outside of a universe of schools and it includes the rest of the world.
Let’s go the videotape. You have been advocating a reckless agenda of arrogant certainty since April 2020. Had it been followed, children’s rights may not have been “violated”, but at what cost? A (hopefully) once in a lifetime event does not come with an instruction manual with predictable outcomes.
LikeLike
“In the coming weeks, Human Rights Watch will release its data and technical evidence, to invite experts, journalists, policymakers, and readers to recreate, test, and engage with its findings and research methods.” (from linked article in blog)
So is this like the first case of Covid reported out of Hunan in December 2019 that everyone ignored?
United States? Which social media platforms? Which education instructional platforms? Which drill/skill software programs?
Schools do have access to email and all know that. Acceptable Use Policies (required everywhere) cite what is prohibited use of school internet and computers. Screening software flags particular terms (suicide, harm to self, as well as pornography and spewing language) and those flags save kids. THIS EdTech use is a whole new deeper, deeper set of levels .
LikeLike
Tracking their mobile devices means the TechEd companies know where all those children are at any given time (where they eat out, where they shop, where they hang out with friends, et al) and all of these companies sell that data to anyone to boost profits and increase the wealth of the already bloated rich.
What does that mean? It means if traffickers want to know the whereabouts of a specific child and their habits so they know where to kidnap them, all they have to do is buy that information from the TechEd giants.
Greed never rests and the greedy hate rules that hamper their wealth acquisition, even arming mass murderers to slaughter chidden if it means more profits.
I remember reading about FORD figuring out what would cost them the most money when Pinto’s were blowing up in rear end collisions because of a problem with the fuel tank. The cost to fix the problem was, if I recall correctly, less than a dollar a Pinto. FORD’s number crunchers figured out it would be cheaper to risk dealing with law suits than spending less than a dollar a Pinto because there were millions of those cars taht needed that safety feature added.
And when the day or reckoning arrived, FORD did what Traitor Trump does, they dragged the court cases out for years, for decades, holding off having to pay the families for their lost loves ones.
The tobacco industry did the same thing. OJ Simpson too. And Alex Jones is doing all he can to follow in their footsteps.
The list goes on and one. Tech Ed is no different.
LikeLike
It is sad that collecting data takes priority over what is in the best interest of students. Although the pandemic is not over, many states resumed standardized testing as a number of dazed and confused young people returned to in-person instruction in the fall. Some children lost family members or were ill themselves with long periods of social isolation. All the media did was beat the drum about “learning loss,” while public schools felt the pressure of the state to get their students to perform on a bubble test like a bunch of trained seals. Many states also implemented poorly planned test prep sessions after school by requiring additional hours, up to 50 hours per subject, in addition to regular school, if students did not take the STAAR last spring. This is how Texas addressed the punitive idiocy of standardized testing. My grandson was at home working on-line for eighteen months during which he moved to a new town during Covid.
At what point does testing interfere with genuine learning? Why do elected representatives troll for the charter lobby instead of representing their constituents, most of whom what quality public education? High stakes testing is child abuse as is repeated threats to closing community public schools. My grandson barked and earned his piece of fish by passing the incursion on his privacy and undermining of his self-esteem, but at what cost?
LikeLiked by 1 person
cx: as are repeated threats
LikeLike
your first sentence is so poignant, and could even be written: IT IS SAD that from now on collecting data will take priority over what is best for students….
LikeLike
Thank you for covering the data collection for K-12. Higher education data collection deserves equal scrutiny.
LikeLike
It is absolutely exhausting as we go from one OUTRAGE to another to another.
All of them are so extreme that it’s allowing only two options for us:
1. We monitor and stay informed about all these in real time & fight like hell
2. We shut out the world, unplug everything, move to a remote place,
off the grid & enjoy each moment.
I’m torn!
Real Life makes my head spin and tears are interfering with watching TV,
reading blogs, and Covid still keeps me isolated.
How do we cope? How do we protect our children?
Is it worse than ever, or we just know more?
Balance is almost impossible.
Vertigo is becoming my New Normal!
LikeLike
Some of the products we had to use, like Zoom, like Google, were “free”, yet the companies offering the products were for profit. We were the products. Governments around the world participated, knowingly clearing the way. We had no choice. Our personal information was conscripted without a draft notice. Data centers overflowed with information that could be used to influence us in the name of Stability.
Now, in 2037, we are an army of people who are conditioned to, as Auldous Huxley predicted, “love their servitude.”
LikeLike
We have a definite problem with our electronic hardware. Data is sucked every single second that invades the privacy of all of us.
I find it a bit strange, however, what we accept this Human Rights Report, but ignore so many others.
LikeLike
This seems relevant: https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2022/may/30/children-read-for-fun
LikeLike