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Blog Entry [details and replies]

The Wales-Wide Web :: Graham Attwell on Learning, Knowledge and Technology Weblog 455 entries 26-October-2007 1 authors
show or hide details for this item Facebook, privacy and the university police Blog Entry 0 replies1 resource 17-July-2007 Graham Attwell
Kind:
Blog Entry
Created:
17-July-2007 11:01:09
Last Updated:
17-July-2007 13:03:29
Author:
Graham Attwell
Status:
published

Resources and Links:

Students' trial by Facebook | Media | MediaGuardian.co.uk Students' trial by Facebook | Media | MediaGuardian.co.uk [ Go there ]
Students' trial by Facebook | Media | MediaGuardian.co.uk
Oxford University staff are logging on to Facebook and using evidence they find on student profiles to discipline students.

Students' trial by Facebook | Media | MediaGuardian.co.uk:

I haven't much time for rowdy, middle class, over-proveledged Oxford students. But I have even less time for the University internal police, archaically called proctors.

And now it looks as if the proctors are hacking Facebook to cause a bit of grief for the students.

But it is going to take some time before we sort out what can and should be shared through social networking sites and what rights of privacy - if any - we should be entitled too. And - I'm not paranoid, honestly - but if a few dozy Oxford proctors can hack their way through Facebook access controls, I sort of think that security services are not going to find it tricky. Are we all monitoring ourselves these days?

"Oxford University staff are logging on to Facebook and using evidence they find on student profiles to discipline students.

Photos on the social networking website of undergraduates celebrating the end of their exams have been emailed to students by the proctors, Oxford's disciplinary body, as evidence of breaches of the University's code of conduct.

Students now face fines of up to £100 after proctors collected evidence of students celebrating the end of exams by "trashing" their friends, covering them with champagne, confetti, flour, and even foodstuffs including raw meat and octopus."

Students may be unable to graduate until the disciplinary hearings are resolved.

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