School allegedly uses students’ laptop webcams for espionage, lawsuit ensues

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.”
[Thanks, Yossi]
School allegedly uses students’ laptop webcams for espionage, lawsuit ensues originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 18 Feb 2010 17:49:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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In: Uncategorized · Tagged with: camera, harriton, harriton high school, HarritonHighSchool, invasion of privacy, InvasionOfPrivacy, law, law suit, LawSuit, legal, lindy mastko, LindyMastko, Lower Merion, Lower Merion school district, LowerMerion, LowerMerionSchoolDistrict, mac book, macbook, mastko, Pennsyvlania, Privacy, suit, web cam, webcam, wow
Current MacBook Pro SKU given mark of death in Best Buy database?
We’ll admit to not being leading the field of study in Best Buy-ology, but here comes a new quiz for us care of a tipster who sent TUAW a screenshot of the inventory screen that shows what looks to be the current MacBook Pro SKU with status: deleted. What that means is no new orders can be made for that unit, at least for that particular store. Sign of impending MBP refresh? Intel certainly had us riled up last month with that Core i5-infused flier, but we won’t get fooled again. Don’t hold your breath for this one, but if more telltale signs start popping up, we’ll be sure let ya know.
Update: Giving credit where due; the image originates from the MacRumors forums.
[Thanks, Jose R]
Current MacBook Pro SKU given mark of death in Best Buy database? originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 08 Feb 2010 21:02:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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In: Uncategorized · Tagged with: alumium, apple, Best Buy, BestBuy, leak, leaks, mac book, mac book pro, macbook, MacbookPro, mb, MBP, rumor, rumors, sku, unibody
MacBook Pro with Intel Core i5 processor revealed via Intel promo flier? (update: prize now Envy 15 instead)
Far be it for us to argue with order of operations, but an apparent Intel Retail Edge Program promotional email has revealed a contest where those who pass this month’s training can win one of two MacBook Pros with Intel Core i5 processors inside. Only catch is, that’s a model that doesn’t yet exist — whoops! Don’t know how long the company expects those winners to wait, but we’ve gone ahead and kept our calendars clear for the end of the month, just in case Apple feels the urge to send out any last-minute press conference invites.
Update: We’ve been sent a new flier from Intel that “corrects” the contest. The prize is now one of two Envy 15s with Core i5. Sure, we’ve joked about the physical similarities before, but did someone really mix the two up that egregiously? Only time will tell. Correction email reprinted after the break.
[Thanks, Mike!]
MacBook Pro with Intel Core i5 processor revealed via Intel promo flier? (update: prize now Envy 15 instead) originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 14 Jan 2010 05:09:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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In: Uncategorized · Tagged with: apple, apple mac, apple macbook, apple macbook pro, AppleMac, AppleMacbook, AppleMacbookPro, core, core i5, CoreI5, i5, Intel, intel core, intel core i5, Intel Retail Edge, Intel Retail Edge Program, IntelCore, IntelCoreI5, IntelRetailEdge, IntelRetailEdgeProgram, mac, mac book, macbook, macbook pro, MacbookPro, MBP
MacBook strips off its polycarbonate unibody shell for the expected teardown
That thumbs up means exactly what you think, and just like all the other new MacBook (Pro) models, that “non-removable” battery in the new polycarbonate unibody MacBook is more of a guideline than an actual set of rules. iFixit’s currently doing its traditional teardown process — so far, other than the battery and hard drive swapping places, the internal geography looks about like its predecessor. Letting your eyes venture into forbidden territories is just a mouse click away at the read link below.
Filed under: Laptops
MacBook strips off its polycarbonate unibody shell for the expected teardown originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 20 Oct 2009 18:34:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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In: Uncategorized · Tagged with: apple, mac book, macbook, poly carbonate, PolyCarbonate, tear down, TearDown, unibody
Apple ‘fesses up to 7200 RPM HDD issues, aims to dispatch a fix forthwith
[Via Register Hardware]
Filed under: Laptops
Apple ‘fesses up to 7200 RPM HDD issues, aims to dispatch a fix forthwith originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 11 Aug 2009 16:32:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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In: Uncategorized · Tagged with: 7200 rpm, 7200rpm, apple, broke, broken, disk drive, disk storage, DiskDrive, DiskStorage, hard disk drive, HardDiskDrive, HDD, mac, mac book, mac book pro, macbook, MacbookPro, memory, rumor, rumors, seagate storage, SeagateStorage, technical issues



