As the use of digital proctoring services continues to increase, privacy advocates and students raise concerns over online monitoring, The New York Times reports. Some faculty members have raised data mining fears, and some students said they feel they are being spied on. Proctoring services noted student data is not sold to third parties and is purged unless preserved in a cheating investigation. “There has to be a better way,” California State University, Sacramento, Criminal Justice Professor Sue Escobar said.
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