FC: U.K. fingerprinting of school children draws privacy outcry

From: Declan McCullagh (declanat_private)
Date: Sun Jul 21 2002 - 21:36:12 PDT

  • Next message: Declan McCullagh: "FC: Harvey Silverglate on TIPS-informing, obstruction of justice"

    ---
    
    Date: Mon, 22 Jul 2002 00:38:22 +0100
    To: s.g.daviesat_private
    From: Simon Davies <s.g.daviesat_private>
    Subject: Privacy Intl. condemns finger printing of school children
    
    
    PRIVACY INTERNATIONAL
    
    
    MEDIA RELEASE
    
    PRIVACY WATCHDOG CONDEMNS MASS FINGER PRINTING OF UK PRIMARY SCHOOL CHILDREN
    
    Privacy International calls for prohibition of child finger printing and 
    urges Parliamentary inquiry into "unofficial endorsement" by the 
    Information Commissioner
    
    22nd July 2002
    
    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
    
    
    The global human rights watchdog Privacy International (PI) has warned that 
    tens of thousands of UK school children are being finger printed by 
    schools, often without the knowledge or consent of their parents.
    
    The electronic finger printing is being conducted as part of a cost cutting 
    "automation" of school libraries. Privacy International has condemned the 
    procedure, branding it "dangerous, illegal and unnecessary", and has called 
    for a prohibition of the technology in schools.
    
    As many as 200,000 primary and high school children from the age of seven 
    have already been finger printed. The vendor estimates that at least 350 
    users have installed the system, including Kenton School, Queens Park 
    County Primary School, St Annes (Stanley) CE School, Fryern Junior School, 
    St Leonards RC Comprehensive School and Radyr Comprehensive School.
    
    The technology being used on British children is similar to the 
    identification systems used in US prisons and for the German military. It 
    is being used in UK schools - sometimes in conjunction with digitised 
    photographs - to replace library cards and to increase efficiency of 
    library management. Each child is required to place a thumb onto an 
    electronic scanner, and the identity of the print is then stored in a computer.
    
    Privacy International says the practice "de-humanises our children and 
    degrades their human rights", and has called for the unconditional 
    withdrawal of the technology from schools. PI's director, Simon Davies, 
    said "the use of such systems will have the effect of de-sensitising people 
    to more comprehensive privacy invasion later in life".
    
    "Such a process has the effect of softening children up for such 
    initiatives as ID cards and DNA testing", commented Mr Davies. "It's 
    clearly a case of 'get them while they're young' They are seen as a soft 
    target for this technology".
    
    Privacy International, the members of which include many of the world's 
    privacy and data protection experts, also strongly criticised the 
    involvement of the office of the Information Commissioner, the body 
    responsible for the protection of information privacy in Britain. In a 
    letter (dated 4th July 2001) to the system vendor, Micro Librarian Systems 
    (MLS), the Commission's compliance officer, Robert Mechan, praised the use 
    of the technology in schools, arguing that finger printing "aids compliance 
    with the Data Protection Act".
    
    In subsequent media coverage, the Commission was reported as wanting to 
    "encourage" the use of finger printing in schools.
    
    "This is a bleak moment for privacy in Britain", said Simon Davies. "The 
    Commissioner's office has damaged privacy and human rights, and has brought 
    disrepute to its role".
    
    "I am appalled that the Commissioner would support a situation where 
    innocent and impressionable young children are obliged to yield their 
    finger prints even before they have reached an age of discretion on such 
    matters".
    
    "The Department for Education and Skills is equally culpable in this 
    matter.  I am staggered that the department could have allowed this 
    practice to spread without consultation with parents or children", said Mr 
    Davies.
    
    The practice came to light after Privacy International and the children's 
    rights group "Action on Rights for Children in Education" (ARCH) received a 
    complaint from the mother of a child attending Sacred Heart School in 
    Ruislip, London. The child had been fingerprinted without the parents' 
    knowledge or consent. They have subsequently demanded the removal of the 
    prints from the library computer system.
    
    The Information Commissioner's support for finger printing was given 
    despite its stated view that it was "theoretically" possible to use the 
    prints for law enforcement purposes
    
    Privacy International has called on the Home Affairs Committee and the 
    Public Administration Select Committee to conduct an inquiry into the 
    dealings between the Information Commissioner's office and private companies.
    
    "The Commission's letter and comments to the media have been interpreted  - 
    and were intended - as a clear endorsement", said Mr Davies. "This practice 
    occurs all too often and leads to significant problems for genuine privacy 
    watchdogs who, following more careful analysis, subsequently identify 
    shortcomings in these products", said Mr Davies.
    
    Privacy International has lodged a request under the Open Government code 
    for all correspondence between the Commissioner's office and technology 
    vendors marketing such equipment for the use of young people. It has also 
    lodged a request with the Department for Education and Skills for internal 
    documents and correspondence.
    
    "The Commissioner's Office must in the future publish its correspondence 
    with such companies, together with a detailed explanation of its view." He 
    added.
    
    Privacy International warned that the practice of finger printing for the 
    purpose of library cards was in clear violation of the Human Rights Act and 
    the Data Protection Act. "The law states that privacy invasion must be 
    proportionate to the threat. A few lost library cards do not warrant mass 
    finger printing" said Mr Davies.
    
    It is also likely that the practice breaches Article 16 of the UN 
    Convention on the Rights of the Child says that "no child shall be 
    subjected to arbitrary or unlawful interference with his or her privacy..."
    
    The potential for expansion of the finger printing system to other purposes 
    is very real, added Mr Davies. In an interview with the publication 
    "Managing Schools Today" in September 2000, Lynn Stevens, Customers 
    Services Manager of MLS commented, "you may ask, why stop with library 
    systems, when schools have so many concerns with registration, attendance, 
    and security? I assure you, we are way ahead of you. Watch this space..." 
    (http://www.microlib.co.uk/images/events/revp2.jpg)
    
    
    _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ __ _ _ _ _ _ _
    
    NOTES TO EDITORS
    
    - The website of MLS can be found at http://www.microlib.co.uk/. Copies of 
    all correspondence and details of the technology, together with the 
    identity of schools using the system, are located on that site.
    
    - Privacy International (PI) is a human rights group formed in 1990 as a 
    watchdog on surveillance by governments and corporations. PI is based in 
    London, and has an office in Washington, D.C.  Together with members in 40 
    countries, PI has conducted campaigns throughout the world on issues 
    ranging from wiretapping and national security activities, to ID cards, 
    video surveillance, data matching, police information systems, and medical 
    privacy, and has worked with a wide range of parliamentary and 
    inter-governmental organisations such as the European Parliament, the House 
    of Lords and UNESCO.
    
    - PI's website is www.privacyinternational.org
    
    - The web address for ARCH is www.arch-ed.org
    
    - Simon Davies can be reached at simonat_private and on 07958 466 552
    
    
    
    
    -------------------------------------------------------------------------
    POLITECH -- Declan McCullagh's politics and technology mailing list
    You may redistribute this message freely if you include this notice.
    To subscribe to Politech: http://www.politechbot.com/info/subscribe.html
    This message is archived at http://www.politechbot.com/
    Declan McCullagh's photographs are at http://www.mccullagh.org/
    -------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Like Politech? Make a donation here: http://www.politechbot.com/donate/
    -------------------------------------------------------------------------
    



    This archive was generated by hypermail 2b30 : Mon Jul 22 2002 - 00:08:37 PDT