Sue Cowley, an education expert who runs training for schools, tweeted her response to the records she had been sent under her name this week: “Excuse my language but WTAF [what the actual fuck] are the DfE doing spending taxpayer money conducting surveillance on critics of government policy on here?”

    • HeartyBeast@kbin.social
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      9 months ago

      I’ve worked in local government comms in the past. It’s pretty obvious that councils will want to know what people are saying on social media. Apart from anything else yoyu don’t to be blind-sided by real problems with policy that are causing people problems - social media is a great way of spotting issues and addressing them. Don’t see anything particularly wrong in not inviting someone to talk to your conference who has been extremely opposed to the policy you are pushing.

      Clearly in the case above the whole cross-referencing twitter and Facebook accounts to dox anonymous posters is dodgy - but certainly, in the past I’ve found anonymous posters claiming to be residents suffering from a housing problem, actually being a political operative of another party. You could see how a councillor could end up saying "look who are these people saying their kids are being damaged?’ and some comms person jumping to find out.

      • mannycalavera@feddit.uk
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        9 months ago

        Staff collected a dossier of critical social media posts, cross-referencing anonymous Twitter accounts with private Facebook wedding photos.

        There’s trying to understand your constituent’s concerns and then there is spying on your constituent’s wedding photos. I dunno, maybe local government is totally comfortable with that 🤷? And get this… because these people wanted better special educational needs provision from their council. Heavens above the gall of these people, right?

        • HeartyBeast@kbin.social
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          9 months ago

          There’s trying to understand your constituent’s concerns and then there is spying on your constituent’s wedding photos.

          Which is why I said it was dodgy - it clearly is.

          However - imagine you are getting a lot of flack from an anonymous Twitter account - it’s fairly obvious that you are going to be asked who this person is. Seeing if they use the same handle on Facebook is a pretty obvious first step. I’m not quite sure what ‘private Facebook wedding photos’ means in this context - the photos will either have to be shared with ‘Everyone’ or shared in a group that the council offer is also a member of. So, private how?

          because these people wanted better special educational needs provision from their council. Heavens above the gall of these people, right?

          Usually the first step in this situations is to try and get the resident some help - if they have a particular problem, you will normally ask them to DM you the details so you can escalate to the right people. I spent about a week chasing up for some poor person who was having a grim time trying to get a repair done - and that’s pretty typical. If it is an anonymous campaign group without specific complaints, yes you are going to be curious as to who they are.

          I’m absolutely not saying that what the council did here is right - an enquiry is absolutely warranted and they may have been bang out of order. But I’m saying it may not simply be a descent into fascism.

  • 3arn0wl@lemmy.world
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    9 months ago

    This is deeply troubling in what is supposed to be a free society.

    Education is a fundamental… But it has never been, and never will be, a one-size-fits-all thing, and trying to impose an Authoritarian View and suppressing other ideas, is just wrong, and bad.

    Perhaps I should request a disclosure of what they have on me : I have been critical of nonsensical testing in the past (though I think that some sort of baseline assessment is needed, and has always been done in some form).

  • AutoTL;DR@lemmings.worldB
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    9 months ago

    This is the best summary I could come up with:


    Ruth Swailes and Aaron Bradbury, co-authors of a bestselling book on early childhood, were told by the organisers of a government-sponsored event for childminders and nursery workers, which they were due to speak at in March, that the DfE planned to cancel the conference just days before it opened because they were deemed to be “unsuitable” headline speakers.

    Speaking to the Observer, Bradbury, principal lecturer in early childhood studies at Nottingham Trent University, said: “I received a phone call from the organisers saying there were some concerns about us being speakers.

    Swailes, an independent consultant who advises schools and nurseries on early years education, was so shocked that she filed a subject access request, requiring the DfE to disclose any documents it held on her.

    Dr Pam Jarvis, a former teacher and education psychologist who has now retired from Leeds Trinity University, said that her request had returned more than 40 pages of records in which officials had monitored her tweets, focusing in particular on her criticisms of the department’s controversial new baseline assessments for four-year-olds in their first term at school.

    One modern languages expert, Carmel O’Hagan, uncovered an email from DfE officials accusing her of having “an axe to grind” on Twitter, now rebranded as X, and an Excel spreadsheet in which the department detailed who she interacted with.

    Sue Cowley, an education expert who runs training for schools, tweeted her response to the records she had been sent under her name this week: “Excuse my language but WTAF [what the actual fuck] are the DfE doing spending taxpayer money conducting surveillance on critics of government policy on here?”


    The original article contains 712 words, the summary contains 271 words. Saved 62%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!

  • blackn1ght@feddit.uk
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    9 months ago

    Sounds like a potential GDPR breach? What genuine business grounds could they be storing that data on people? Even if it is in a spreadsheet on someone’s computer, it’s still not right.