Thursday, January 25, 2007

Where does Buckley end?

No, not William F. Buckley, but FERPA -- commonly known as the Buckley Amendment. When do protections stop covering the communications of college students? The common answer is that student emails are a part of the educational record, although I have found some debate as to whether content may color that question. For example, a message from a teacher with grade or course information to a student, or student-to-student discussions of educational matters, are clearly part of the record. However, are student-to-student emails regarding the weather covered as "educational records". Does that extend to non-student-to-student email?

Regardless, most agree that email in the email box at the ".edu" are protected, but does that protection follow forwarded email? I am curious if anyone out there has the answer. That might have wide ranging implications for the SNW world. For example, if a .edu account is needed to acquire an account -- the old Facebook scheme -- then does that by association carry Buckley protection to the content on the Facebook page? Highly unlikely, but still begs the question.

Fed sources seem vague on this -- at least what is searchable on-line -- but I'd be interested if any of the other folks working in the SNW world have any ideas. Email me direct at my .edu -- bismith@uark.edu.

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