Sorry to butt in, but in Europe - or at least in the UK - this would all be 
subject to data protection law, and this kind of thing would be very, very 
unlikely. In my daughter's school at least, they're very strong about asking 
permission before any photos are used, and always do their best to make sure 
people know exactly how photos etc. are going to be used.

Mind you, there's another factor that I'd want to take into account for kids 
(though not pre-schoolers) which is the rights of the kids themselves to 
privacy. Under the UN CRC, they're supposed to have rights in accordance with 
their maturity and understanding, not just their age - and those include 
privacy rights. Those rights compete with the parents' rights - but the kids at 
the very least have the right to be consulted on the subject. I don't know many 
places in the world where this actually happens: the Convention on the Rights 
of the Child is paid little more than lip service.

Paul

Dr Paul Bernal
Lecturer
UEA Law School
University of East Anglia
Norwich Research Park
Norwich NR4 7TJ

email: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
Web: http://www.paulbernal.co.uk/
Blog: http://paulbernal.wordpress.com/
Twitter: @paulbernalUK

On 9 Jan 2013, at 00:55, Brian Conley 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>
 wrote:


Hi all,

Perhaps this is not the right forum, but I happen to believe it is. If we care 
to discuss liberation tech, we ought to discuss the liberation of those who 
have little or no capacity to choose for themselves, yes?

What's concerning me today is a decision by my daughter's preschool. They blog 
daily with photos and narrative stories about the kids day st school. 
Previously, though technically "public" the blog was not indexed and very 
difficult(impossible?) to find without the direct link.

At the beginning of this year they overhauled the site and are publishing the 
blog in its entirety attached directly to the preschool. That this change was 
done without discussion or consent of parents strikes me as greatly concerning.

As many of you know, I'm generally one of the people saying that too often 
libtech activists are a bit excessive in their response to the forward progress 
of technology and social media. Am I out of bounds here? Is this kind of daily 
blogging of a preschoolers life not a bit frightening?

Any advice from other colleagues, parents or otherwise, would be greatly 
appreciated. Though I might have answers for activists and civilians threatened 
with death or worse, this situation leaves me at a loss as to how I should 
respond.

Regards

Brian

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