The University of Sydney SRC (Student Representative Council) has obtained evidence showing that the University of Sydney engaged in surveillance of staff and students.
Documents obtained by the SRC under the Government Information (Public Access) Act 2009 (also known as GIPA) show the university has engaged in surveillance of staff and students who were organising against course and staff cuts last year.
The GIPA documents show the university used . Dataminr uses artificial intelligence technology to 鈥 from within publicly available data.鈥
Dataminr is used by the Central Intelligence Agency, United States police departments, news agencies, private companies and government institutions. The tech company is a partner of Twitter, which provides it with unlimited access to the 鈥渇irehose鈥 鈥 a constant stream of all available data from a source in real time. This allowed Dataminr to scan every tweet.
Dataminr uses its platform to surveil Twitter for keywords and other indicators of supposedly high risk activities. It was used to try and disrupt last year鈥檚 Black Lives Matter in the US, by from protesters鈥 social media.
The GIPA documents show that the university used Dataminr to monitor student and staff on Twitter and Facebook and create lists of those attending protests which were automatically sent as email alerts to the university鈥檚 administration officers.
In particular, tweets in support of student activities by senior lecturer in Modern Chinese History David Brophy and law professor Simon Rice were monitored and shared with university operations staff.
During the protests of that year, by police and then fined $1000.
It is聽likely that the university鈥檚 Dataminr information was shared with the NSW Police. At聽the time of the education protests, they聽had routinely been entering campus in big numbers.聽They were widely criticised for using excessive force at the education protests.
The GIPA documents also showed that the university was aware of the authoritarian nature of the NSW Police operation to quash the protests 鈥 including deploying undercover police 鈥 and being聽physically聽aggressive.
Sydney University Student Representative Council president Swapnik Sanagavarapu told 91自拍论坛 that management's聽actions 鈥渃ontradict the spirit鈥 of the university.
Sanagavarapu said that students and staff are outraged, but not deterred, by the聽revelations聽and would continue to assert their freedom of assembly and right to protect their data.
Staff and students organised an action on May 11 to protest mangement's聽surveillance and its attempt to suppress activism.
While it is unclear whether the university still uses Dataminr, management has affirmed that the platform was 鈥渢rialled briefly鈥.