Copy Paste Quotes

Dangers of putting pupils’ images on school websites | Letters

Schools can compromise children’s privacy, exposing them to potential identity fraud, harassment and AI exploitation, says Dr Claire Bessant

It was concerning, but sadly unsurprising, to read a Guardian article reporting that UK schools are being blackmailed with AI-generated child sexual abuse images created from photos shared on school websites and social media pages (UK schools should remove pupils’ online photos as AI blackmail threat grows, say experts, 8 May). Lord Russell, in the 2024 debates on the data (use and access) bill, highlighted the potential for AI to be used to scrape images from school websites and social media. His comments were informed by research undertaken by Defend Digital Me, which found pupil data in publicly available AI training datasets.

Welsh government guidance warns schools to “exercise great caution sharing images or videos of learners publicly on social media platforms due to the potential risk of the content being misused”. It notes that social media platforms are vulnerable to web scraping, and that the large-scale collection of information posted online, and resulting loss of control over images, can expose pupils to privacy risks. The only advice that the Department for Education provides schools on pupil image use appears in its data protection guidance. This states that social media use “often requires extra care”, and that schools should “make pupils and parents or carers aware that social media involves wider sharing and may carry higher privacy risks”.

Continue reading...

May 19, 2026 Internet safety Child protection Children

Need the full article?

Use the dedicated news page for the summary, then jump straight to the original source when you want the complete story.