Practical consequence to comply: throw away all them Chromebooks. Because one thing a Chromebook will not do is not send personal data to Google.
Or better: convert them into Linux machines. But I doubt whoever went with Chromebooks in the first place has the resources or the knowledge to do this: why would they have chosen to buy Chromebooks otherwise?
GravitySpoiled@lemmy.ml 9 months ago
Whoever is in charge of this:
Nextcloud is a very solid cloud solution which doesn’t suffer from those data leaks. nextcloud.com
You do not have to sell the chromebooks, you can replace the OS with fedora. You can customize your OS acording to your needs with ublue universal-blue.org
RootBeerGuy@discuss.tchncs.de 9 months ago
I applaud your optimism that there are enough people employed in the school IT to that properly.
Don’t get me wrong, you are absolutely right with those statements, but the schools used Chromebooks for a reason I would think, the same reason that if they had not used Chromebooks it would be some Windows installation.
It is what people know, it is “easy” to work with and so on. Those are obviously not great reasons and not 100% true, but that is what counts for those schools.
I am very curious what they are going to replace this with and I am unfortunately 100% sure it is going to be Windows and the Onedribe/Outlook ecosystem.
Successful_Try543@feddit.de 9 months ago
Concerning the cloud workspace, it would be possible, that the IT services of the Danish regions (or of the whole state) run centralised clouds (Nextcloud, Moodle, …).
sonori@beehaw.org 9 months ago
Having worked with schools that use chromebooks before, generally the entire point of using them is that Google is your IT department. You don’t need any on site servers beyond a router from your isp, and can just return anything that breaks to Google for a replacement, all very cheaply. The records can all be administered by whatever teacher is least scared of computers and can use the nice gui. Especially for smaller schools with say a dozen or so total staff, not needing to pay a employee or MSP to fix the computers is a big deal.
Nextcloud however, as much as I like using it, requires a server. It requires the ability to understand hardware requirements enogh to get a good nas, an ok understanding of dns, and when the gui updater breaks, an ability to ssh in and run the updater manually. You need ssl certs, and if your using letsencrypt port forwarding, and public dns entery, and keeping on top of updates. Jan, fourth grade teacher who plays Stardew Valley and so isn’t too terrified when asked to go into the brightly colored menu, is not going even know it exists, much less install it.
Also, the problem with Fedora is that it also requires an domain, which means installing and configuring dedicated domain controllers, which is not an simple task. You need a deficated IT person, or you go with an MSP, and the MSP will just set up a windows environment in a few hours and be done with it.
NaoPb@eviltoast.org 9 months ago
Is Nextcloud also for personal use or just corporate? I can’t seem to find any kind of pricing on it.
throws_lemy@lemmy.nz 9 months ago
You may use Nextcloud for personal use, I’ve been using it for 2 years now.
try this url link to sign-up nextcloud.com/sign-up/
catonwheels@ttrpg.network 9 months ago
Any suggestions for replacing the admin tools and examination mode on Linux?
2xsaiko@discuss.tchncs.de 9 months ago
In our university we have an Ansible playbook to set up firewall rules etc. and change the network share and user logins so that they can’t access the Internet or any previously saved files.