Comment Re:Wait.. (Score 1) 699
I'm a resident of LMSD and have some of my nieces and nephews attending it's schools (none in high school yet). The question as to how this theft system was activated has been flying around a great deal among the parents. The school has not addressed this point, but lawyered up instead. Let me fill you in on what the locals are saying.
While I can't profess to any kind of certainty about this, word on the street is that the student in question had lost his laptop privileges prior to this debacle. What this means is that he no longer had a laptop to bring home and had to borrow a loaner while at school. The laptop in this particular case was supposed to be a loaner that was not to leave school property. When the laptop wasn't returned at the end of the day, it was presumed lost or stolen and that is when the infamous picture was snapped. I think we all know where the laptop was.
This would explain why a laptop that was not lost or stolen could have been regarded as such. This would explain why the snapshot would have been taken.
Please don't take this to mean that I support this kind of invasion of privacy. I think that the school had a responsibility to tell parents that their laptops had this kind of capability. Informed parents could have weighed the pros and cons and taken the laptops only if they felt like these terms were acceptable.