Amazon – 社区黑料 America's Education News Source Tue, 24 Feb 2026 22:05:00 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.2 /wp-content/uploads/2022/05/cropped-74_favicon-32x32.png Amazon – 社区黑料 32 32 Amazon-owned Ring and Flock Broke Up. Privacy Experts Ask: Should Schools, Too? /article/the-worlds-biggest-e-commerce-co-split-with-flock-should-schools-do-the-same/ Sat, 21 Feb 2026 11:30:00 +0000 /?post_type=article&p=1028951 School (in)Security is our biweekly briefing on the latest school safety news, vetted by Mark KeierleberSubscribe here.

Milo went missing. 

Yet it wasn鈥檛 the lost puppy that gave people the jitters 鈥 it was the promise behind the story: that a communitywide web of home security systems could transform a neighborhood into a 鈥淪earch Party.鈥

Eamonn Fitzmaurice/社区黑料 (Source: Ryan Murphy/Getty Images)

The Super Bowl commercial set off public backlash against two leading surveillance companies: Amazon, which owns Ring doorbell cameras, and Flock Safety, which makes license plate reader cameras. Within days, the e-commerce giant announced it was ditching a planned partnership with Atlanta-based Flock.

Privacy advocates said the breakup represented a rare, high-profile retreat from the expansion of surveillance-driven policing 鈥 and that school leaders should take note.

鈥淭he fact that Amazon is reconsidering their relationship with Flock should be a very large and glaring sign that schools should also perhaps reconsider that relationship,鈥 said Kristin Woelfel, policy counsel for equity in civic technology at the nonprofit Center for Democracy and Technology.

In an investigation last week, 社区黑料 revealed that police nationwide routinely tapped into school district Flock cameras to assist President Donald Trump鈥檚 mass immigration crackdown, which has also led to public outcry and protest over the U.S. Department of Homeland Security鈥檚 unprecedented surveillance tactics.

You can also listen to me talk about my latest reporting on the and on on San Francisco’s KALW public radio.


In the news

The latest in Trump鈥檚 immigration crackdown: A Georgia elementary school teacher was killed this week while driving to work when a man being chased by federal immigration agents rammed into her vehicle. | 

  • Conservative advocacy group Defending Education has built a database of some 700 school districts nationally that have adopted policies restricting federal immigration agents’ access to campuses. | 
  • U.S. Department of Homeland Security spokeswoman Tricia McLaughlin, who repeatedly denied that federal agents were targeting schools, is stepping down. | 
Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg leaves Los Angeles Superior Court this week. (Photo by Wally Skalij/Getty Images)

Instagram and other Meta-owned social media apps have navigated youth safety 鈥渋n a reasonable way,鈥 company CEO Mark Zuckerberg testified Wednesday in a courtroom filled with parents who have accused the company and other tech giants of hooking their children on the platforms and decimating their mental health. | 

鈥榃orried that I was going to die鈥: Georgia high schoolers opened up this week about the horrors of getting shot during the 2024 Apalachee High School shooting that led to the deaths of two teachers and two students. Students鈥 testimonies came during a criminal trial accusing the alleged shooter鈥檚 father of recklessness and failure to prevent the tragedy. | 

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Should schools call child protective services on students who are chronically absent? Debate has ensued. | 

  • A Georgia father has been arrested on allegations that each of his two sons has missed nearly 400 days of school. One is an elementary school student, while the other is in middle school. | 

In a significant departure from past years, the Education Department鈥檚 civil rights division didn鈥檛 close any sexual harassment and assault cases involving K-12 schools in 2025, after the Trump administration slashed the agency and purged its caseload. | 


ICYMI @The74


Emotional Support

社区黑料 is proud to announce we鈥檝e hired Simon and Max, who joined reporter Lauren Wagner a few weeks ago at our growing Nebraska bureau.

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Amazon鈥檚 Ring Cuts Ties with Surveillance Camera Co. Used by ICE. Will Schools? /article/amazons-ring-cuts-ties-with-surveillance-camera-co-used-by-ice-will-schools/ Fri, 20 Feb 2026 11:30:00 +0000 /?post_type=article&p=1028742 Updated Feb. 24, clarification appended Feb. 20

Milo went missing. 

Yet it wasn鈥檛 the lost puppy that gave people the jitters 鈥 it was the promise behind the story: That a communitywide web of home security systems could transform a neighborhood into a 鈥淪earch Party.鈥

The Super Bowl commercial against two leading surveillance companies, Amazon, which owns Ring doorbell cameras, and Flock Safety, which makes license plate reader cameras. Within days, the e-commerce giant announced it was ditching a planned partnership with Atlanta-based Flock.

Privacy advocates said the breakup represented a rare, high-profile retreat from the expansion of surveillance-driven policing 鈥 and that school leaders should take note.


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鈥淭he fact that Amazon is reconsidering their relationship with Flock should be a very large and glaring sign that schools should also perhaps reconsider that relationship,鈥 said Kristin Woelfel, policy counsel for equity in civic technology at the nonprofit Center for Democracy and Technology. 

In an investigation last week, 社区黑料 revealed that police nationwide routinely tapped into school district Flock cameras to assist President Donald Trump鈥檚 mass immigration crackdown, which has also led to public outcry and protest over the U.S. Department of Homeland Security鈥檚

Ring鈥檚 planned integration with Flock Safety would have allowed homeowners to share their camera feeds with the police. The company said the collaboration was never launched but it still plans to roll out 鈥淪earch Party鈥 to homeowners, first for 鈥渇inding dogs鈥

In statements, the two companies described the , with Ring saying it

Some 100 school districts across the country have contracted with Flock, according to government procurement records. Their cameras are designed to capture license plate numbers, timestamps and other identifying details, which are uploaded to a cloud server. Flock customers, including schools, can decide whether to share their information with other police agencies in the company鈥檚 national network. 

Typical Flock automated license plate reader, mounted to a pole and powered by a solar panel (Wikipedia, CC)

Woelfel鈥檚 warning lands amid of automated license plate readers and their use by federal immigration agents to track down targets. Flock audit logs obtained by 社区黑料 and interviews reveal local police departments nationwide are searching school district-run surveillance networks to aid the DHS in immigration enforcement cases. 

The logs were from Texas school districts that contract with Flock and showed that law enforcement agencies far beyond their borders 鈥 including in Florida, Georgia, Indiana and Tennessee 鈥 routinely conducted searches on the districts’ campus feeds, tagging reasons such as 鈥淚mmigration (criminal)鈥 and 鈥淚mmigration (civil/administrative).鈥 Multiple law enforcement officials acknowledged the searches were done at the request of federal immigration agents, with one saying the local assist was given without hesitation. 

Ring spokesperson Emma Daniels said the company doesn鈥檛 contract with school districts directly. The company鈥檚 鈥渢erminated integration with Flock鈥 is specific to a tool that allows local police 鈥渢o request video footage from Ring users in a specific area during a defined time period鈥 to help in investigations related to 鈥渁 car theft, a burglary or other local safety concerns.鈥

Flock spokesperson Holly Beilin said her company was not involved in the 鈥淪earch Party鈥 feature promoted in the Super Bowl ad and its planned Ring collaboration 鈥渉ad nothing to do with any of our school customers.鈥 Those customers rely on the automated license plate readers to navigate parent custody logistics and in parking lots where 鈥渕ost incidents of violence at schools take place.鈥 In December, district s to investigate a rash of car break-ins in school parking lots.

Immigration and Customs enforcement agents have during school pick-up and drop-off to target immigrant families. 

Beilin said she didn鈥檛 know how frequently school-owned Flock networks were being queried on behalf of ICE, but that the company had rolled out that allows customers to disable immigration-related searches on their devices. 

Kristin Woelfel

鈥淚f school district police, or, frankly any police, decides that that is against their policy, they can turn that search filter on,鈥 Beilin told 社区黑料. 鈥淪o any of those searches would be filtered out.鈥 

There is no evidence from 社区黑料鈥檚 analysis that the Texas school districts use the devices for their own immigration-related investigations, but the audit logs raise questions about how broadly school safety data are being fed into the far-reaching surveillance tool. 

That school Flock cameras are being accessed by out-of-state police officers for immigration enforcement is 鈥渁 really serious privacy issue for children and families鈥 Woelfel said. 

鈥淵ou have to think about what effect it鈥檚 ultimately going to have on the community,鈥 she continued. 鈥淓ven in places without Flock cameras, people are afraid to drop their kids off at school,鈥 because of heightened immigration enforcement and the Trump administration’s policy change that lifted longstanding restrictions against immigration enforcement in or around schools and other 鈥渟ensitive locations.鈥 

Amazon-owned home security company Ring ended a partnership with surveillance vendor Flock Safety after a Super Bowl commercial led to public backlash. (Photo by Joe Raedle/Getty Images)

鈥楥an鈥檛 believe we have that here鈥

For 16-year-old Zachary Schwartz, a high schooler from San Francisco, backlash to the Ring ad validated something he鈥檚 been telling people for months: Flock鈥檚 presence in communities nationwide has grown far too vast and most Americans don鈥檛 even realize it. 

鈥淵ou hear about tracking systems in other countries, like China, which are more authoritarian,鈥 Schwartz said. 鈥淎nd it鈥檚 like, 鈥榃hoa, I can鈥檛 believe we have that here.鈥 

Schwartz said he fell down the Flock rabbit hole after watching , which sent him digging into its widespread use in his own city. He learned the San Francisco Police Department shared its feeds with law enforcement officers nationwide, including for immigration enforcement, in apparent . Activists have also elevated concerns about weak cybersecurity safeguards and faulty findings that

Schwartz built a website, , to drive attention to Flock鈥檚 presence. He also circulated posters across San Francisco urging residents to learn about the cameras constantly watching them.

鈥淚f you鈥檙e driving on a major roadway, you鈥檙e being tracked in the city,鈥 Schwartz said. 鈥淚t would be pretty hard to avoid it while going to school if you鈥檙e going by car or by a bus.鈥 

San Francisco high schooler Zachary Schwartz hung up posters across the city alerting residents to Flock Safety automated license plate reader cameras. (Courtesy Zachary Schwartz)

社区黑料 reached out to 30 districts to learn more about how they use Flock and whether they鈥檝e assessed how their data are shared. Few responded and almost all declined to comment. Several, including Indiana鈥檚 Center Grove Community School Corporation, said they ended their contracts with Flock without providing details about why. 

One district that did respond was Minnetonka Public Schools, 12 miles southwest of Minneapolis, where the Trump administration鈥檚 mass deployment of immigration agents last month resulted in the fatal shootings of two citizens, closed Minneapolis Public Schools for two days and forced multiple districts in the Twin Cities area to offer remote learning for students too afraid to come to school.

District spokesperson JacQueline Getty said Minnetonka school officials use Flock license plate readers primarily to ensure people who have been banned from campus don鈥檛 trespass on school property. She didn鈥檛 elaborate on whether district Flock data are shared directly with outside law enforcement agencies or if their data have been leveraged to assist federal immigration agents. 

鈥淲e cooperate with our local law enforcement department when there is a need to do so, such as if our reader pings a stolen vehicle entering our lot,鈥 Getty said in an email. 鈥淥ur primary goal is campus safety, and the district has benefited from identifying people who should not be on district property.鈥

At Indiana University in Bloomington, in a January protest criticizing the city鈥檚 use of Flock license plate readers. In at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, the campus it 鈥渦ses a limited number鈥 of Flock cameras for campus safety but has 鈥渆nabled specific settings within our system to prevent searches related to immigration enforcement.鈥 

鈥楾he future that we really want?鈥

The controversy comes on the heels of efforts at Flock to security. Security vendor Raptor Technologies announced last year an initiative to implement Flock cameras into a product designed to enhance safety during afternoon dismissal. 

Raptor Technologies, which counts roughly 40% of U.S. school districts as its customers, offers software that screens school visitors.

鈥淏y working with both schools and local law enforcement, Flock helps create safe corridors for student travel 鈥 whether that鈥檚 monitoring activity along walking routes, at bus stops or on nearby roads,鈥 Flock said in . 

In 2024, Raptor聽suffered a cybersecurity lapse that exposed millions of sensitive records 鈥斅爄ncluding districts鈥 active-shooter plans and students鈥 medical records 鈥斅爐o the internet.

“Raptor Technologies does not share, sell or disclose any data collected on our platform with third parties or government agencies,” a company spokesperson said in a statement after this article was published.

“We do not provide access to our systems or customer records other than as directed by customers or pursuant to a valid government order,” according to the statement. Although Raptor tools integrate with other companies’ security offerings, the spokesperson said it is up to districts to “determine what data, if any, is shared, the scope of what is shared and whether an integration is enabled.”

Schwartz, the San Francisco high schooler, said students learn about mass surveillance at school by reading books like George Orwell鈥檚 classic 1984. Yet when government overreach 鈥渉appens right in front of us,鈥 he said, 鈥渕any people don鈥檛 see it.鈥

In a place where Bay Area technology companies routinely roll out their latest wares, people are starting to wake up, he said. 

鈥淚t also means that we see the future before it happens sometimes,鈥 Schwartz said, 鈥渁nd we can decide 鈥極h, is this the future that we really want?鈥欌

Clarification: Flock鈥檚 licensed plate reader cameras were not part of the company鈥檚 since-cancelled integration with Ring. The subhead on this story has been updated to make that distinction clearer.

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鈥楽py High:鈥 Amazon Documentary Probes Dangers of Online Student Surveillance /article/spy-high-amazon-documentary-probes-dangers-of-online-student-surveillance/ Mon, 21 Apr 2025 12:30:00 +0000 /?post_type=article&p=1013855 It all began with a pixelated image of a Mike and Ike: the colorful, fruity candy that with a digital blur and authorities鈥 preconceived notions could perhaps be mistaken for a pill. 

That鈥檚 what happened to 15-year-old Blake Robbins, who was accused by officials in Pennsylvania鈥檚 affluent Lower Merion School District of dealing drugs in 2009 after they surreptitiously snapped a photo of him at home with the chewy candy in his hand. The moment was captured by the webcam on his school-issued laptop, one of some 66,000 covert student images collected by the district, including one of Robbins asleep in his bed. 

Robbins sued and the subsequent case, dubbed 鈥淲ebcamGate,鈥 is at the center of now streaming on Amazon Prime, that examines the high-profile student surveillance scandal and the explosion of student privacy threats that followed it.


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The Lower Merion School District, which settled the class-action lawsuit, was an early adopter of one-to-one computer education technology programs that provide school-issued laptops to students. Such programs have since , particularly since the pandemic. So, too, have digital surveillance tools like Gaggle and GoGuardian, which alert educators when students express thoughts of self-harm or discuss topics deemed taboo, like sex, violence or drugs. 

Directed by Jody McVeigh-Schultz and executive produced by Mark Wahlberg, the documentary offers a cautionary tale about what happens when student monitoring initiatives 鈥 often intended to promote young people鈥檚 safety and well-being 鈥 go awry. It also explores how covert student surveillance intersects with far-reaching school equity issues involving race, disability, privilege and discipline. 

After years of reporting on digital student surveillance myself, I caught up last week with McVeigh-Schultz, whose other documentaries include about reality TV鈥檚 seemingly wholesome Duggar family and the Emmy-nominated which delves into the brutal 1960 killing of three women in an Illinois state park. We talked about what he wants viewers to take away from the Robbins鈥 scandal 15 years after it unfolded and the lessons it holds for contemporary student privacy debates and schools鈥 growing reliance on ed tech. 

The interview was edited for length and clarity. 

What motivated you to take a deep dive into the Robbins case, and why is it important right now?

I grew up just outside of Philly in a suburb called Cheltenham and I had heard about this story. I knew Lower Merion as the high school that Kobe [Bryant] went to. That鈥檚 what it was famous for, but I knew about the Robbins story and I was like, 鈥淭hat鈥檚 crazy,鈥 when I heard about it back in 2010 and then I kind of never heard anything more about it. It was a really big story and then just kind of went away. 

When we talked to folks from wealthy suburbs outside of Philadelphia, I think it’s very clear to me that one of the key indicators of status is education. It鈥檚 more important than anything else to people. 

The public schools in Lower Merion are really highly rated and people care a ton about the quality of the education and the image of the institution. What are the real world implications of that? 

In this case, the way it played out, some of the things that happened were counterintuitive. Many folks from that community didn’t want to see a lawsuit come to bear against their school. It was like, 鈥淥h well, you know, this actually is perhaps going to affect our home values,鈥 if you鈥檙e selling your home and the biggest selling point is the quality of the education.

Blake Robbins, then a high school student in Pennsylvania’s affluent Lower Merion School District, speaks to the press about his 2010 lawsuit alleging covert digital surveillance by educators. (Unrealistic Ideas)

That’s something that you wouldn’t expect to be one of the first reactions to finding out that the schools may be surveilling your kids. But it was, and the fact that the Robbins family had lived in the community for a long time but just weren鈥檛 considered part of the in-group just because of who they were was very interesting and, I think, led to people being skeptical of them.

The documentary leaves it up to you to decide whether that skepticism is deserved or not.

Absolutely. The documentary certainly highlights how people are complex and have complicated stories. What did you learn about debates over personal privacy, especially when it comes to information about children?

People’s expectations of how much privacy you should be afforded, and how much you should expect without having to ask any questions, those expectations vary a lot. 

Somebody who was interviewed in a news piece that ran in 2010 said, 鈥淵ou know, this is the school district鈥檚 laptop, they could tap in at any time and rightfully so.鈥 I鈥檓 a parent, I have a 2-year-old and a 7-year-old who鈥檚 in first grade. To me, that seems a bit absurd, but the truth is, I think there are certain contexts where a school-issued laptop is going to be surveilled. We know it鈥檚 going to be surveilled, but we don’t expect that it will be able to take pictures in our kids鈥 bedrooms. 

To me it’s a matter of where are [the] spaces where we should reasonably expect privacy? Transparency is the most important aspect of all of this. Not only were there no conversations going on like, 鈥淗ey look, these laptops are going to be surveilled in a number of ways. You should not be leaving them open in your bedroom, You should not be going on any website you wouldn鈥檛 want your principal to also see.鈥 The IT department specifically thought it would be a bad idea if parents and students were alerted to the existence of the software that could take images. They felt like, 鈥淲ell then we won鈥檛 be able to recover the stolen laptop because people will just put tape over it.鈥

Well, that is their decision not to have images taken of them in their bedroom, right? One of the journalists we interviewed said it was like trying to kill a fly with a bazooka. This level of surveillance was not required to track inventory. It just wasn鈥檛. 

Hindsight is 20/20 but it鈥檚 obvious from what transpired that they spent a lot more money on legal fees and settling these lawsuits than they ever saved by making sure a handful of laptops were not stolen or lost.

What did you learn about the motives of the school district officials, the lawyers and the families involved?

When I鈥檓 making a documentary I鈥檓 never thinking in terms of quote-unquote good guys and bad guys. Everyone in this story thought they were doing what was best for the students involved. But in the end, I think there was this balance of protecting students 鈥 privacy and protecting the image of the school district. When a mistake is made, there is a reluctance to admit and take responsibility and accept blame. Once you do that, you are admitting to what happened and then there鈥檚 all these legal ramifications. 

Multiple people are like, you know, these kids need therapists, they need somebody to check on them and to be like, 鈥淗ey, your privacy was violated, are you doing OK?鈥 and that did not happen.

I can鈥檛 say why that didn鈥檛 happen but to me it seems likely that part of not offering people help is that the minute you say this person needs a therapist because of what we did, you鈥檙e admitting to a pretty major violation. 

The documentary doesn鈥檛 focus just on the Robbins case. It offers a deep dive into education policy debates around racial inequities, school integration, gender equality and LGBTQ+ rights. What did you find were the implications of surveillance for these populations? 

We talked to Elizabeth Laird at the Center for Democracy and Technology and one of the things she said she sees all the time is that when surveillance is ubiquitous and regularly used in education, vulnerable populations end up feeling the brunt of the negative repercussions. 

In this case, back in 2010, people discovered that a disproportionate amount of the students that were surveilled were African American. There was a sense that if this technology was being misused to discipline students or to check up on students then the chances are it was going to be misused for somebody that was a student of color. 

When we started talking to students of color who had their images taken, we started to understand, 鈥淥h, there is this whole context to what they鈥檙e experiencing.鈥 Somebody said you can鈥檛 understand the laptop issue without understanding all these other battles that were happening at the time. There was a history of an achievement gap there and African-American parents felt like if you wanted to get an equal education for your kids, you had to fight for it. In this context, there was a real lack of trust of the school district by African-American parents. 

Keron Williams and his mother really wanted to tell his story. It was a story of somebody suspecting him of stealing a bracelet and him being brought into the principal’s office. He says his laptop webcam was activated a couple days later after they searched his pockets and found nothing but a Boy Scouts handkerchief. 

There鈥檚 racial profiling but also this idea of the misuse of technology meant to keep laptops from being stolen. If something like this is misused, vulnerable populations are going to feel the brunt of it more. 

That brings me to one of the other stories we talked about, which was more recent. 

In 2020, with the pandemic, school-issued devices and remote learning became the norm. We talked to two students who started high school online, went to classes on Zoom, and they were using their school-issued laptops for everything. 

The way they communicated instead of seeing their friends at lunch was through a Google Hangouts chat. What they didn’t realize was their school was using monitoring software that essentially scooped up everything they wrote while logged into their school account, including private chats. They were brought to the principal鈥檚 office and were confronted with what they wrote. 

The context of it is that the school decided it was bullying. What we reveal is that they were using the word 鈥済ay鈥 because they were. The term they used was 鈥渨e鈥檙e a pretty gay friend group. Gay was a descriptor to us.鈥

One of these kids had to come out in the principal鈥檚 office with his father there. Luckily his parents were pretty great about it, but that鈥檚 a really awful position to put a kid in and, you know, again, a vulnerable population bearing the brunt of overzealous surveillance. 

The goal of this surveillance is to protect kids, it鈥檚 to make sure kids aren鈥檛 hurting themselves, hurting other students. There鈥檚 obviously a mental health crisis going on in terms of high school-aged kids, but there really has to be a discussion about whether these tactics are making the mental health crisis better or worse. 

You鈥檙e talking about the tools that schools nationally have increasingly used to collect and analyze reams of information about students in the name of keeping them safe. This includes tools like Gaggle and GoGuardian. Given the growth in these tools, do any guardrails need to be put in place? 

First of all, it’s so important that students know what is being used to surveil any device they’re using. The fact that kids hadn’t heard of Gaggle is really a problem. 

But if they know about it, that doesn鈥檛 solve all the problems because what you鈥檙e asking high schoolers especially to do is to find their own voice, understand how to freely express themselves, to be vulnerable. In some of my best creative writing courses my teachers were saying, 鈥淟ook, if it scares you to write this, you鈥檙e probably going in the right direction.鈥 

The minute a kid realizes, 鈥淲ell, everything that I鈥檓 writing in a creative writing class 鈥 a poem, a personal essay 鈥 is going through this software, maybe going to my principal, maybe going to law enforcement,鈥 they鈥檙e going to express themselves differently. That鈥檚 just a really dangerous road to go down.

Students and parents have to be aware, but also I just think it should be less powerful. I don’t think we should be able to say there are no ways in which you can use our technology, which is kind of unavoidable if you’re a high school student, without being constantly surveilled.

In Minnesota, the story we cover, they . That鈥檚 a pretty huge step, and I think that鈥檒l happen more and more as people become more aware of this stuff. 

 There are just places where we should not be allowing this.

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