Kamakazie Sith wrote:It's quite literally like sneaking into someones house and looking through their personal files, installing cameras(spyware), and playing chess(chat programs) in their house.
While I agree that the kids screwed up by disobeying agreements that they signed (and compounded their error by ignoring
repeated warnings - don't mess with people who have power over you), this analogy (like
so many analogies to physical objects/scenarios) doesn't quite fit considering that the students were handed these laptops with the express purpose of being used. Furthermore, the property in question isn't nearly so private or sacrosanct as that of a person's home.
This is more like a matter of being in someone else's house, being told not to go into the bedroom or use the phone, and then going into the bedroom and using the phone anyway.
And, while punishment needs to be administered to the students (although I'm a little hesitant about felony charges), frankly that IT staff needs to be
canned. Shit, the district IT department I work for is almost entirely a Windows shop, and it's a hell of a lot more secure than
that.