School allegedly uses students'  laptop webcams  for espionage, lawsuit ensues
               By Ross  Miller
Hold onto your butts, kids, we've got a doozy of a  story. Let's take this one slow: a class-action lawsuit has been filed  in Pennsylvania accusing the Lower Merion school district of  "unauthorized, inappropriate and indiscriminate remote activation" of  webcams in laptops issued to students, without prior knowledge or  consent. The tale begins when Assistant Principal Lindy Mastko of  Harriton High School informed a student that he was "engaged in improper  behavior in his home"; the suit alleges that when pressed for details,  Mastko told both the boy and his father that the school district could  remotely activate the webcam -- a capability that is apparently being  used.
The school district has yet to respond to the accusations, so at this  point we've only got the plaintiff's side of the story -- for all we  know this kid took a picture of himself and somehow accidentally  uploaded it on the school network. Then again, some purported Lower  Merion students just emailed 
Gizmodo and claimed that their  MacBooks' green webcam lights went on at random times, but they were  told by IT support that it was just a technical glitch. Holy alleged 
invasion  of privacy, Batman, this could get mighty interesting. PDF of the  complaint available below.
Update: The Lower Merion School District superintendent  Christopher McGinley has issued an 
official  response on its website, acknowledging "a  security feature intended to track lost, stolen and missing laptops."  Going further, he says the district " has not used the tracking feature or web cam for any other purpose or in  any other manner whatsoever" but that the matter is "under review."                                                                              
                                Lawsuit  (PDF), Gizmodo
Lawsuit  (PDF), Gizmodo
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