US Colleges Are Trying To Install Location Tracking Apps On Students' Phones (theverge.com) 139
Some U.S. colleges are now apparently requiring students to install a location tracking app to track attendance. Sean Hollister writes for The Verge: The Kansas City Star reported that at the University of Missouri, new students "won't be given a choice" of whether to install the SpotterEDU app, which uses Apple's iBeacons to broadcast a Bluetooth signal that can help the phone figure out whether a student is actually in a room. But a university spokesperson told Campus Reform on Sunday that only athletes are technically required to use the app, and a new statement from the university on Monday not only claims that it's "completely optional" for students, but that the app's being piloted with fewer than 2 percent of the student body.
What the reports do agree on: the app uses local Bluetooth signals, not GPS, so it's probably not going to be very useful to track students outside of school. "No GPS tracking is enabled, meaning the technology cannot locate the students once they leave class," reads part of the university's statement. SpotterEDU isn't just used at the University of Missouri, though -- it's being tested at nearly 40 schools, company founder and former college basketball coach Rick Carter told The Washington Post in December. The Post's story makes it sound remarkably effective, with one Syracuse professor attesting that classes have never been so full, with more than 90 percent attendance. But that same professor attested that an earlier version of the app did have access to GPS coordinates, if only for a student to proactively share their location with a teacher. The Post reports that Degree Analytics is also being used in an additional 19 schools, but unlike SpotterEDU, it uses Wi-Fi signals instead of Bluetooth.
The New York Times also reported in September of a similar app from a company called FanMaker that provides "loyalty points" to students who stick around to watch college sports games at the stadium instead of skipping out. That app is in use at 40 schools, the Times wrote.
What the reports do agree on: the app uses local Bluetooth signals, not GPS, so it's probably not going to be very useful to track students outside of school. "No GPS tracking is enabled, meaning the technology cannot locate the students once they leave class," reads part of the university's statement. SpotterEDU isn't just used at the University of Missouri, though -- it's being tested at nearly 40 schools, company founder and former college basketball coach Rick Carter told The Washington Post in December. The Post's story makes it sound remarkably effective, with one Syracuse professor attesting that classes have never been so full, with more than 90 percent attendance. But that same professor attested that an earlier version of the app did have access to GPS coordinates, if only for a student to proactively share their location with a teacher. The Post reports that Degree Analytics is also being used in an additional 19 schools, but unlike SpotterEDU, it uses Wi-Fi signals instead of Bluetooth.
The New York Times also reported in September of a similar app from a company called FanMaker that provides "loyalty points" to students who stick around to watch college sports games at the stadium instead of skipping out. That app is in use at 40 schools, the Times wrote.
Location Trackins is for Cows (Score:2, Funny)
Location tracking is for cows. Moo, cows, moooooo!
MOOOOO, you location-tracked cows.
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Location tracking APPS are for cows. Moo, cows, moooooo!
MOOOOO, you location-tracked cows.
FTFY.
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Not really surprised that the students in Missouri are cows. Mooooo!
But I don't think "a college in Missouri are trying to" is really the same as "US colleges are trying to." Maybe "a college in the US is trying to," but that already is low information merely for clickbait.
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Wow, that's a blast from the past.
1984 is now. (Score:5, Insightful)
We have doublethink, we have newspeak, we have the telescreen -- in our pocket!
When paper books and film on real actual film are dead, then who's to say Minitruth won't actually exist, and "fix" history? Or the present?
Hell, with the news, well.. there it is. Written in realtime for your entertainment.
And then, track everyone everywhere.
Get them when they're young, right? Yeah, been going on for a while now.
Where's my two minutes' rage? Oh yeah that's all the rage these days, raging. Rage it up yo!
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"Welcome to the Rage Against the Machine!". Double-plus ungood.
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Too busy posting prayer requests on Facebook.
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They are offering their "thoughts and prayers"
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Prayer: A method for making oneself feel good about doing nothing.
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Re: Sorry Sir.... (Score:1)
If your phone batterie dies (Score:3)
You cease to exist.
Re: Sorry Sir.... (Score:4, Interesting)
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Really?
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1. You are not really anonymous, even ignoring IP address tracking. Who knows what the database does?
2. What if a bug in the future exposes your user information when posting.
3. What if a bug occ
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The sky won't fall, we will (Score:3)
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All I ask is, if you're going to blow up my world, at least have the decency to wait until I'm dead, ok?
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Yeah, stock market at an all time high, lowest unemployment ever. The US is going to hell! If only we had Clinton II, things would be so much better.
Re: The sky won't fall, we will (Score:3, Insightful)
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Yeah it's almost as if who the President is doesn't matter. Maybe it is the PEOPLE that matter?
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Well, wait and see, if Sanders or Warren gets into the Oval Office, I think you'll see the stock market tank pretty quickly.
I'm guessing the economy in general will take a hit if either of them get elected.
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Oh horseshit. Hyperbole.
Re: The sky won't fall, we will (Score:2)
However, wages have been stagnant to you need 3 jobs to make ends me. Care to own that as well?
That got its start during Nixon.
Thank you for playing.
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The claim that "you need 3 jobs" is just plain false. "Multiple jobholders" have hovered 5% of the labor force for years. It peaked a little over 6% during the '90's, fell to around 5%, and stayed there, (https://www.bls.gov/webapps/legacy/cpsatab9.htm). And that is in spite of the rise of Uber, "the gig economy", and so forth.
While it is generally true that Presidents tend ge
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Wages have been stagnant for the 40 years I've worked as an adult. You can show whatever graphs you want, but in my experience with working for around 12 different companies (some for a year, a few for 5 or more), companies only offer 'cost of living' increases year after year. Which is stagnant. The only exception is sometimes, when one gets a promotion, one might get a token increase. My daughter's husband has gotten some really good increases in his first few years of employment, but so did I as I ro
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Well, that's been the norm for decades now.....the days of a job for life have been gone since at least the 70's....
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Yep, them are the facts. For more fun:
Obama: unemp ~10%, reduced to 5%. Improvement 100%
Trump: unemp ~5%, reduced to 4%. Improvement 20%
Re: The sky won't fall, we will (Score:3, Insightful)
Easy to reduce a high number to a low number. Much harder to reduce a low number to an even lower number.
Reduce your defect rate from 10% to 5%.
Now reduce it from 5% to 0%.
Same percentage...not the same difficulty.
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Sooo....improvement 20%. So the sky ISN'T falling? Amazing. So you agree that the statement: "Hell, our current POTUS so far as I can see is hell-bent to try to destroy this country." is BS? thanks for confirming!
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US colleges are in a death spiral right now. They had a time where they could enjoy hyper-inflated tuition and because of student loans and grants, they still had their classes full. Now people are disillusioned because college doesn't grant them jobs like it did pre-2008, but they still have to pay for it, and compete for the same jobs that the people fresh out of high school are going for.
In the past, one also could make it through a recession when jobs were unavailable by going for a MS or other degree
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Also meaning ... (Score:2)
The school is requiring students to have a smartphone, and one capable of running the app. Maybe not such a stretch now, but still. What if a student doesn't want or can't afford such a phone?
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And this is why I turn blue-tooth off and only use it when I update the one App that requires it.
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The school is requiring students to have a smartphone, and one capable of running the app. Maybe not such a stretch now, but still. What if a student doesn't want or can't afford such a phone?
What if a student can't afford tuition, textbooks, housing, meal plans? I imagine if a student can afford all of those, they can afford a phone. That doesn't mean I'm in favor of this kind of tracking, but I don't think the cost is the big issue here.
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Anyways mommy will insist that daddy pays for the little darling's phones in have case they have "an emergency" (mommy needs to text darling every day, y'know).
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I've never owned one. I ain't buying one just for their app. And yes, I live in Missouri.
It's bullshit.
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The real cost isn't the phone, it's the cell plan that goes with it. Though if it's just using Bluetooth then you might be able to get away without a cell plan, or for that matter, a cheap tablet instead of a phone. Not that any of this excuses what the college is doing.
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If you're not taking out loans, at an extra grand (even $500), yes it's a big deal. That and the phone is *only* required for tracking, not class.
I've never owned one. I ain't buying one just for their app. And yes, I live in Missouri.
It's bullshit.
What about using an Android device that isn't a phone?
My guess is the reason they're doing this is because they figure most students would not ever hand their phone to a classmate to carry in for them. Thing is, there are non-phone devices, there are phones that aren't connected to cellular service, etc. It would probably be trivial to set up such a device to satisfy the app but without cell service. Which also means a classmate could carry a student's non-phone in and get that student attendance credit.
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The minimum specs are apparently secret, as the developer only lists them as 'android'.
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I paid for few textbooks, lived with my parents and ate at home. Just because one is attending college does not mean one has money.
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you get an loan
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Or he used his parent's cash, more likely.
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There are decent enough phones with all the required tracking capabilities that cost less than $100. You can even get them with a removable battery, so battery life time becomes less of an issue.
And as far as not wanting one, I suppose in your educational agreement they could demand that you have one that is compliant with what they want?
I am not sure how the legal situation in the US is here. Can they require you to carry certain things on yo
Bluetooth tracking doesn't need an app (Score:2)
No need to have any app, or any terms of service. You are tracking their public broadcasts.
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With basic software, they could use their BLE beacons to track everyone with bluetooth, even if they don't have the app. Then, load in a week's data and guess the schedule of every bluetooth device, then correlate that with human schedules, and ake a correlation between device and human. Then track that device on and off campus (with limited range, so they'll be paying bars and stores to put in their trackers).
No need to have any app, or any terms of service. You are tracking their public broadcasts.
You know, your battery life usually gets quite a bit longer when you turn off WiFi, Bluetooth and location...
I don't need any of them unless I'm out somewhere I haven't been before.
I use my cheap android tablet with pre-loaded maps and GPS for navigation. (the tablet is usually plugged into car power when traveling)
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Ditto WiFi (Score:2)
athletes? is the NCAA covering the data plan + pho (Score:2)
athletes? is the NCAA covering the data plan + phone and are they now employees?
Separate the liberal arts from the actual students (Score:2)
I think anyone in a tech major would have a field day with this one. There's no way that it won't be exploited vigorously and hilariously.
Now the poor liberal arts students might be put upon, but they may be able to start an outreach program for lonely nerds who can hook them up with the work-around.
I understand tracking THESE scholarship kids (Score:4, Interesting)
I despise tracking but this isn't a private school like Harvard or Stanford. Tracking makes sense given that the state is paying for the athletes' education and IF Mizzou student-athletes have a low graduation rate.
in addition, how many of these kids will be become full time, professional athletes, 1%? Which means all the rest will need to fall back on their education to get a job in the real world. Who pays if they can't?
You want my tax dollars for a free education, I want to know it's being spent wisely.
student-athletes don't have time to be students (Score:1)
when the team needs 40+ hours an week with travel
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When I was in college, the athletes were not required to attend classes and all their exams were open-book.
They clearly weren't there for an education. So this story surprises me.
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Remember when searching their lockers was taboo and the stuff of news headlines? Now we're basically tagging them like cattle and yet people still make jokes about slippery slopes.
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Remember when searching their lockers was taboo and the stuff of news headlines? Now we're basically tagging them like cattle and yet people still make jokes about slippery slopes.
...then they just disposed of the lockers, problem solved. Wonder what they're planning for the cattle.
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You are not from GB or Europe are you.
CCTV on nearly every corner.
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Yep, in America it is CCTV's on doorbell's with the people using their arms to defend the police's right to use the data.
The idea of an armed population keeping the tyrants at bay has proven to be a failure and failed before the 18th century was over.
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"Not without a warrant, motherfucker."
Huh. And all this time I'd thought John McClane was saying "Yippie-Ki-Yay".
Marketing (Score:2)
What the reports do agree on: the app uses local Bluetooth signals, not GPS, so it's probably not going to be very useful to track students outside of school
Unless, of course, the app maker decides to partner with local businesses to let them track and market to students, then every business near the campus may have trackers.
This is entirely stupid (Score:5, Insightful)
Sure, many students benefit from attendance, but some do not and some only do for some lecturers. The first thing I tell my students that attendance is optional, except at the exams. It is _my_ job to make the lecture worthwhile to attend. And for those that do well just with the slides, that is fine too. Forced attendance only promotes lecturer laziness and lecturer ego.
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Sure, many students benefit from attendance, but some do not and some only do for some lecturers. The first thing I tell my students that attendance is optional, except at the exams. It is _my_ job to make the lecture worthwhile to attend. And for those that do well just with the slides, that is fine too. Forced attendance only promotes lecturer laziness and lecturer ego.
I had a professor that didn't take attendance at all. His opinion was if they didn't show up that was their problem. The entire point of college was that you didn't have to be there. It's a privilege and you can make use of it or not.
We've seen this before. High school used to be optional, as soon as it was more or less made mandatory the quality went down. Now we're seeing it at the University level and expect the outcome to be different?
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Allegedly he did it for his own personal statistic to correlate between attendance and the performance in exams. I never saw the results. But I had some concerns about the testing methodology because of survivor bias as the
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On the academic level I think making attendance voluntary as well as only having finals that determine whether you pass or fail and nothing in between is a good measure to separate the wheat from the chaff (despite of failure rates).
There are those who perform well without attending classes for attributes like high self-efficacy. And there are those who perform well through attending classes, since there they can have a dialogue or in general benefit from peer learning. Here I think it's not the duty of the institution of higher learning to do this work for the students, but for students to find the way that works for them themselves.
Some people may be in need of help here and could perform well if they got help. But that is also something those people have to decide on their own.
There is a balance that needs to be struck between too much hand-holding and not enough. If your goal is to FIND people who have mastered the material, then a purely evaluative model would be fine - just have some accreditation exams. That's how lawyers do it in some states - just pass the bar, no need to go to law school. If your goal is to PRODUCE people who have mastered the material, then providing instruction and incentives for taking part in that instruction makes sense.
Since we as a society benefit f
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I never took attendance, save for one program for veterans that required verification to keep their benefits.
I found that tests were sufficient enforcement.
If attending my class isn't useful enough, I'm in the wrong business. And for the handful that can get by without class, or were forced to formally take a class that they didn't need, neither the student, I, nor the other students benefits from enforced attendance.
Then again, I had a lot more time available in my office for those that bothered to come t
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One boring lecturer, one student and a bag full of phones... Anyone? Anyone??
Bag full of $45 Walmart specials. "Sure, that's my phone. Never leave home without it!" *reads text on an iPhone* "This? This is my security blanket and sexual acceptability meter. Yes, both at once. Can't live without it, can't get laid without it."
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The first thing I tell my students that attendance is optional, except at the exams. It is _my_ job to make the lecture worthwhile to attend.
This!
If I can ace the class by only showing up for the exams, there is clearly no point in showing up for anything but the exams.
Not this shit again (Score:2)
The good teachers, on the other hand, didn't care if you showed up or not. They had good lectures and students showed up because it was useful.
Me? Tell me when the quizes and tests were gonna be and what they would cover. If your lectures were worthwhil
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Unfornately, some students buy papers and cheat. Seeing the students in class and hearing the students, and questioning them on the material live, is vital feedback to grading students and to verifying that they do the work. It's also an opportunity to notice failing students _long_ before they flunk and help them with class. It's also very difficult to do if the student is never in class and especially if they are cheating.
This is how it starts (Score:3)
No big deal (Score:2)
I'm not like that, so I have a phone that I turn on at the beginning of these classes, and off at the end. Really simple.
Mule your way to no student loans! (Score:3)
Sounds like a good way for an enterprising student to help pay their tuition by being a phone mule.
Re:Mule your way to no student loans! (Score:4, Insightful)
I would love to send this comment, without context, back to the 1990s and have slashdotters try to explain what it means.
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Why? (Score:2)
If your phone's location is being tracked... (Score:2)
Too many ways to fail (Score:2)
-Your phone battery dies - Do you get points off for forgetting to charge your phone, having an old phone, or using your phone too much when the only available section of the class was late in the day?
-Your phone crashes - They do sometimes, and you may not notice immediately, especially if you are paying attention in class.
-You forget to turn bluetooth back on - Maybe you didn't need it before class or were conserving battery life ear
TRUU FANS (Score:2)
..wait a minute not only you as a student pay for the sport teams tuition and wages, you're also being force fed to be a fan of them to create an illusion that the team has more fans, presumably for advertising purposes or what the f is the motive for them to fill the seats with people who don't actually give a f about what is going on in the field?
college sports will die in 10-20 years. It's just too expensive and has nothing to do with the service the colleges customers pay for. maybe some self sufficient
Why do they care? (Score:3)
As a college instructor let me say: I don't care if a student skips class. They're an adult, they've got to know.
Maybe today's topic is something they already know - then there are better uses of their time. Maybe they're lazy, or don't care, in which case they wouldn't pay attention and would just distract others. Either way: if they don't want to be there, then I don't want them there.
So: why do colleges go to such lengths to force attendance?
Outsorce... (Score:2)
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Attendance is Wrong (Score:3)
Iâ(TM)m a college professor and ultimately I bow to the system and offer some grade benefit to attendance but always small enough and porous enough that the motivated can avoid it. But ultimately it's morally wrong to take attendance in college and consider that in assigning grades as the student who does equally well without attending has shown a greater mastery of the material.
Worse, some people like myself find it super difficult to learn anything from lecture. Had I been required to attend class at Caltech I would have failed out since I wouldn't have had time to actually read and learn the material with all that wasted class time. We give lip service to learning styles but when it comes to accommodating them not so much.
Yes, students do worse in the first class attendance isn't taken but they then learn to manage their own attendance. But even if this isn't true it wouldn't be ok to give students who don't attend a worse grade than their mastery of the subject entails even if it helps others.
And the truth is most professors require attendance as much out of ego and moralizing views which are totally not appropriate to someone employed by the students to teach them.
So I dislike making attendance easier to take but realistically it's not much more privacy invading with tech than it was using pen and paper.
Re: Attendance is Wrong (Score:2)
If/when I get tenure I will stop but I serve no one by getting fired and replaced with someone more eager to grade on attendance.
Re: Attendance is Wrong (Score:2)
The choices I face are
A) Make some principled declaration teach one more year and then never teach again and no doubt replaced with someone who doesn't question attendance. Moreover I wouldn't really do much good in that one class if the lesson of being responsible for your own learning is undermined by every later instructor.
B) Continue to press the argument from inside academia and minimize the amount I count attendance in final grades. I've discovered that even if attendance is only 10% of final grade
Have things changed?? (Score:2)
I could have sworn that when I attended college 40 years ago, I paid them. They weren't my mother and were not responsible for my finances. I paid them a fee to teach me courses. I did accept their conditions if I wanted a degree that I had to take a bunch of absolutely useless classes and pay for them. But if I wanted to pay for classes I didn't attend, it was none of their business as long as I passed the tests and other coursework requirements. It didn't cost them anything if I didn't attend classes.
They Cannot Make You Bring Your Phone (Score:2)
Honesty and integrity need not apply (Score:2)
Of course they are --- what did we expect? (Score:2)
Of course, the University of Missouri must come into line with the Chinese Communist Party's Social Credit System --- we should all expect this. When the morons, idiots, jackholes and traitor-scum allow the CCP's Ministry of State Security to establish intelligence stations/operatives throughout the USA and Canada . . . .
https://www.gao.gov/extracts/c... [gao.gov]
One must expect this crapola!
(One clownish commenter from Germany --- probably Mercator, an outfit financed b
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Such data is typically anonymized _after_ it is initially recorded. If you've the capacity to read and record the initial communications, you can record the location information transmitted to the local app. Whether the transactions are encrypted end-to-end and whether the transactions are vulnerable to man=in-the-middle recording is an excellent question. Whether the programmers are _honest_ or loyal to other nations who pay them, rely on their national loyalty, or blackmail them is another issue. Whether
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Giving out information like that to parents would be a huge violation of FERPA.