At Oklahoma State University,
students' steps are tracked to stop the coronavirus
The school president says
students shouldn't be worried about privacy issues and the "Orwellian
effect" because the data is collected for internal use only.
By Joe Enoch Aug. 23,
2020 3:01 AM PDT
STILLWATER, Okla. — Newfound
freedom is part of the allure of going off to college, but COVID-19 changes
things. At Oklahoma State University, the school tracks where students are at
all times on campus to slow the spread of the disease.
Oklahoma State tracks the
location data of students and staff who are signed on to campus Wi-Fi routers.
The school also uses student card swipes, campus purchases and course
attendance to complete contact tracing.
Students have tested positive
at multiple universities that have decided to open their campuses in August. At
the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill this week,
an outbreak prompted administrators to return to distance learning.
Local health officials are
conducting contact tracing to determine who might have been exposed to the 23
people infected.
The state of Oklahoma has
logged at least 51,746 coronavirus cases since the beginning
of the pandemic, but Oklahoma State University says its new technology gives it
the confidence to stay open.
To show us how it works, NBC
News followed freshman Jared Moore, 18, around campus as the university logged
his every move. He swiped a card at the student union.
"Going to grab some
milk. No better way to start the day," he said on a GoPro camera provided
by the "TODAY" show.
He went to class, where he
said: "Just started class. We're all social distancing."
At the gym, a card swipe
documented his presence while he worked out.
He ended the day back at his
fraternity to hang out with friends.
"Got some guys hanging
out in here," Moore said.
The next day, Christie
Hawkins, an administrator who runs the school’s contact tracing effort, showed
NBC News a digital map with every building Moore entered on campus.
"What we can see, of
course, is the buildings that he was in," she said. "Those are the
ones that are highlighted.”
But the technology goes even
further: Using the school’s more than 5,000 Wi-Fi hot spots, it allows staff to
determine not only what building, but also what floor and even what room a sick
student may have entered.
“We're not saying this
student was in a building and here's all the other students in that building,”
Hawkins said. “It's much more specific and down through a specific Wi-Fi access
point.”
She said that granular,
detailed information is key in not only determining who to quarantine, but who
not to quarantine.
“If we know based on Wi-Fi
access that another student wasn't in that class that day, we can exclude those
from the contact tracing efforts,” Hawkins said.
She added that this
information is only used to track students while they are on campus. Moore, for
example, disappeared from the school’s surveillance grid briefly — when he left
campus to eat lunch.
Students interviewed by NBC
News had mixed feelings about the technology.
“It feels like we’re kind of
being spied on,” said junior Beatrice Essel.
“If it helps us with COVID
and keeps everybody safe from the harmful effects of it, then I’m all for it,”
said freshman Simon Landrum.
But Oklahoma State University
President Burns Hargis said the information is used for internal purposes only.
"Those that are worried
about the privacy issues and the Orwellian effect of all of this really don't
understand what we're using this for," he said. "We've got lots of
information on everybody on our campus. But we don't distribute it. We don't
share it with anybody."
He said the data was
"critical" in the effort to keep the campus free of COVID-19.
Students have no ability to
opt out of having their card swipes and class attendance used to track their
locations, but they can turn off Wi-Fi on their phones if they don't want staff
members to know their every move.
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