Parents Furious As School Installs Fingerprint Scanners To Track Student's Toilet Usage

By Samantha in Bizarre On 8th September 2022
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A high school in Sydney is facing backlash over its plan to scan students' fingerprints to deal with ongoing combat.

ABC News reported that Moorebank High School, in Sydney’s southwest, invested in a biometric system in June after spending thousands of dollars restoring vandalised bathrooms.

The system was introduced two years ago at a Community Focus Group with parents and teachers. It's already led to more than 1,000 students registering to have their fingerprints scanned.

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School principal Vally Grego told parents via a newsletter that the latest system was getting installed in school to ‘monitor students' movement during class time’.

Though she pointed out that the system does not actually record a fingerprint.

"The Posiflex kiosks do not store a copy of your fingerprint, it stores an alphanumerical representation of the fingerprint," she wrote.

"We are introducing this system to monitor students' movement during class time and to reduce the incidents of vandalism. We will then investigate the upgrade to the toilets."

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A Department of Education spokeswoman also ensured the parents that the system is not compulsory.

However, according to the Herald Sun one parent called fingerprint scanning 'extreme'.

They said: “There was only that tiny paragraph in the newsletter, no notes sent home, no email, only a focus group no one knew about... it wasn’t communicated properly by the school, there’s a real lack of transparency.

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“It just feels a little extreme and concerning with the level of surveillance and data being collected about our children.”

Even though parents and students are hitting out against this new system, Year 11 student Daniel Scutella told ABC News about how the vandalism continued to worsen over the past few years.

"Often there's been cases where people have thrown their poo on the ceiling," he said.

"It happens a few times a year at least. It's quite disgusting."

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However, program lead at Digital Rights Watch Samantha Floreani said there are many privacy concerns from storing students’ data, especially if it lands in the wrong hands, as per The Guardian.

She said: “If there were to be a data breach, for example – if the information was to be accessed by someone who’s not authorised, or if there was a leak, or if there was a hack – then suddenly you’ve got a student fingerprint being accessed by people who shouldn’t have access to that information.

“And then that creates all kinds of risks for those students, for example, identity fraud, or it could potentially be linked with all kinds of other information.”