DiscoverIn The NOCOSome Colorado schools use facial recognition software to make students safer. Is it also a civil rights violation?
Some Colorado schools use facial recognition software to make students safer. Is it also a civil rights violation?

Some Colorado schools use facial recognition software to make students safer. Is it also a civil rights violation?

Update: 2024-10-29
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A handful of Colorado schools monitor their students with cameras that use facial recognition software. It’s a security measure: An administrator with access to the technology can upload a student’s photo and then the system can use cameras around the school to pinpoint a student’s location.  


More school districts across the state are exploring whether to adopt this technology, according to a recent story in the Denver Post. And it's highlighting a conflict between supporters who say it helps make schools safer and opponents who call it a violation of students’ civil rights.  


In the NoCo’s Brad Turner talked with Denver Post education reporter Elizabeth Hernadez, who has been covering the subject and spoken with people on all sides of the issue.

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Host and Producer: Erin O'Toole
Producer: Ariel Lavery
Executive Producer: Brad Turner
Theme music by Robbie Reverb
Additional music by Blue Dot Sessions
In The NoCo is a production of KUNC News and Community Radio for Northern Colorado.

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Some Colorado schools use facial recognition software to make students safer. Is it also a civil rights violation?

Some Colorado schools use facial recognition software to make students safer. Is it also a civil rights violation?

KUNC