months to come now. ok, this has been such an months to come now. ok, this has been such an office months to come now. ok, this has been such an office in a months to come now. ok, this has been such an office in a story, - months to come now. ok, this has been such an office in a story, but| been such an office in a story, but there are some other stories something we are discussing. let me take you to the daily telegraph. it of course has afghanistan, but it is also covering one of the major stories domestically, related to the plymouth shooting, and, james, this is about social media checks for gun owners. ~ , ,., y is about social media checks for gun owners. ~ ,,., , ., ., owners. absolutely. you are right. on any other day, owners. absolutely. you are right. on any other day, this owners. absolutely. you are right. on any other day, this is owners. absolutely. you are right. on any other day, this is definitely the lead, and to have a foreign story leading in all t
Students care about their data privacy, and this concern is increasing.
A 2016 EDUCAUSE Center for Analysis and Research (ECAR) survey found that one-third of undergraduate students were concerned that technology advances may increasingly invade [their] privacy. A Gallup poll in 2015 found that 44 percent of Millennials believe their personal information is kept private some of the time and that 26 percent believe their personal information is kept private little or none of the time. In 2016, the Gallup poll showed that 44 percent of Millennials trusted companies to keep their personal information private all or most of the time but that 33 percent trusted companies to keep their personal information private little or none of the time, a 7 percentage point increase from 2015. These surveys reflect students growing awareness and distrust of entities possessing their data. In 2018, Gallup found that 39 percent of respondents ages 18 to 49 were very concerned about
cia. congressman, this couple met supposedly all the legal requirements, and she got this fiancee visa, then she got the green card. looking through all the documents, apparently they didn t see any red flags in this case. how is that possible? well, as the previous person you were interviewing mentioned, a lot of that information seems to have been in private channels that she was using on social media. and even you know, we re talking about how do you include a social media checks in a visa interview. you know, what does that actually mean? and some of the information that s public is probably not where they re saying i m going to go and perform jihad. you know, i want to kill people when i get to america. it s in some of those private channels. and being able to search that is a very difficult thing. and one piece, we talk about the visa, one of the jobs i did during the day when i was overseas was stamp visas. and then i did my real job at night. that was my cover job. and i ne
a totally normal way. so they wouldn t have the right to search his apartment. but what it suggests to me is we need our police officers doing social media checks, particularly on young people, when they go on these visits, because that s where they re posting the revealing items about their personal life and particularly if they re disturbed in some way. i m just wondering if that had been done here whether we d have a different outcome in california. part of what made this probably so difficult for police, james, is that elliott rodger was able to fool them when they checked on him. he was able to convince them he was okay. in a case like this, when someone is so good at masking their mental health issues, how can police and health professionals see through that? because there are other people out there just like elliott rodger. what signs should these officials look for? well, the problem is, there s no telltale warning signs. we talk about red flags, but there are really only y