Estimated reading time: 1 minute, 38 seconds

Back-to-school Season Brings Cybersecurity Risks

As schools across the United States reopen their doors, at least virtually, they are quickly running into challenges with information security.

laptop 315048 640Nevada’s Clark County School District revealed a data breach last month, leading the school board to seek state funding for internet connectivity, as the Las Vegas Review-Journal reports. A cyber attack forced an Oklahoma district to delay the first day of school, according to FOX 25. And a Southern California school district was also crippled by a cyber attack, as The Sun in San Bernardino, Calif., reports.

A North Carolina district was even forced to close for an entire week due to a cyber attack perpetrated by, as the superintendent told ABC 13 News, “dirty, rotten, lowdown scoundrels.” Elsewhere in the Tar Heel state, a charter school has sued a former employee for allegedly obtaining sensitive data about students, staff and parents, as the Wilmington, N.C., Port City Daily reports.

In Spokane, Wash., school officials said they were implementing cybersecurity measures as virtual learning begins, according to local KXLY. Students can’t download material onto school-provided laptops, which the IT department can track and, if necessary, lock-down remotely.

Mathew Newfield, chief information security officer at Unisys, recommends parents talk to their children about cyber risks. For example, he told Nashville’s WKRN, students should know how to verify the safety of links they receive in emails or text messages.

Other cybersecurity experts recommend content filters for children’s devices, though that generally comes pre-installed on computers provided by schools, according to WTVY in Alabama. “It's kind of like the COVID thing,” a local cybersecurity professor told ABC 15 News. “You just have to work together, have a healthy discussion… what protocols are we going to follow, just to stay healthy.”

As GovTech notes, institutions of higher learning such as the University of Utah and the University of California-San Francisco have paid six- and seven-figure sums to get their systems back online after cyber attacks in recent months.

Read 2301 times
Rate this item
(0 votes)

Visit other PMG Sites:

PMG360 is committed to protecting the privacy of the personal data we collect from our subscribers/agents/customers/exhibitors and sponsors. On May 25th, the European's GDPR policy will be enforced. Nothing is changing about your current settings or how your information is processed, however, we have made a few changes. We have updated our Privacy Policy and Cookie Policy to make it easier for you to understand what information we collect, how and why we collect it.