laura: hello, everyone, i m laura ingraham, with the the ingraham angle . this is what americans are facing this christmas, cost of living is so high people are raiding their 401(k)s to pay their bills. including violent criminals and suspected terrorists. the government releasing 5,000 migrants into the country every day this really stunned me. 670,000 known got-aways in fiscal year 2023 alone. the open border helped sink our cities into squalor and deadly consequences in small town america as well. raffaele romero is now behind bars in jackson county charged with capital murder in the death of 16-year-old medina. he is undocumented. nobody ever wants to see your child in the bathtub the way i found her. nobody. the curtains were closed i didn t see her. when i opened those curtains, i just want justice for my baby. laura: murdered her and left her in the bathtub. if all of that is not bad enough for you. there are new concerns that the tens of thousands of chinese
few consequences for it. until there is a presumptive preemptive right to know, no as well as know, and the loopholes are closed, and until there is an idea for example, that you cannot require students to log into google in order to be able to access their homework, their class schedules, and their grades, this is going to go on. what silicon valley corporate giants will say is, oh, the teachers and parents that arehi complaining about this are just stupid. they don t know that they can just merely log off. when, in fact, it s been proven, there are teachers and parents, particularly in missouri, which is where the rebellion has caught on about this, areho showing that plain text passwords are being stored without parental and student consent. the thing is, the kids, as you
daughter two years ago. the team used her mother simon home address, bringing in an onslaught of unsolicited mailers and spam still coming in today. it is a violation. someone has access to your child that you don t know. some parents and their kids never realize the survey was optional. they falsely believe it would impact their college application. a law professor has researched student data mining practices. how can a parent find out? the bottom line is it s almost impossible. the marketplace is opaque. reporter: it currently there s no federal law regulating consumer data broker. the college board which administers the standardized test and surveys says the data is never shared without student consent. adding, when we hear concerns from students or counselors, we investigate diligently. we had terminated accounts previously when we have identified users that violated our authors use policy. the department of education was the public to know the surveys
optional. there s no way to track down the information they have given and take it back. shepard: and no demerits for not filling it out. what do you do to protect? read the fine print. look closely at the wording. that s what the experts say. look closely at the wording. we talked to a fordham university law professor. he s researched the student data mining practices. how can a parent find out? the bottom line is it s almost impossible. the marketplace is very opaque. we were able to identify about a dozen companies that were purporting to sell student information. currently there s no federal law regulating consumer data brokers. the college board, which administers the standardized test, the sat and the surveys says the information is never shared without student consent. part of a statement that says