RFID chips and schoolkids
Miguel took exception to my ISTE point/counterpoint article on using RFID chips to monitor schoolchildren in school. I knew my stance would be controversial when I wrote the piece, so I’ll take this opportunity to respond to Miguel’s criticisms. Here’s my thinking, using the Brittan Elementary (Sutter, CA) program as an example…
- There’s nothing on the RFID chips except a number. No demographic information. No address information. No personally-identifiable information whatsoever. Nothing except a unique ID number that’s meaningful only to the specialized school software that matches kids with attendance records (and, maybe later, lunch records). There’s a big difference between the information stored on the kids’ RFID cards and what was on the British passports. Anyone who stole the info from the kids’ RFID chips literally would get bupkis…
The students who take my school law courses would tell you that I’m actually a pretty strong privacy advocate. That said, I also recognize that, as technology-using individuals, we make choices every day to sacrifice privacy for convenience. That trend is only going to intensify as the benefits of divulging certain types of information outweigh whatever privacy concerns most folks have.
We need to be careful to protect students’ private information from theft and other improper uses. That said, I’m not sure that a meaningless number on a students’ RFID chip is the red flag that others make it out to be.