Family says teen with autism suspended after hacking Cobb School’s computer system

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 7 май 2024
  • The teen's grandmother says the district did not take into account his autism and mental health diagnosis.
    SUBSCRIBE and turn on notifications so you don't miss any videos: bit.ly/3SS3Avs
    For more stories check out www.atlantanewsfirst.com/
    FOLLOW US for more!
    Like Atlanta News First on Facebook: bit.ly/3EcIseI
    Follow Atlanta News First on Twitter: bit.ly/3SQcVmV
    Follow Atlanta News First Instagram: bit.ly/3rdWMMg
    Follow Atlanta News First Tik Tok: bit.ly/3RC8U4p

Комментарии • 40

  • @justrandomthings319
    @justrandomthings319 11 дней назад +16

    Ugh. I hate when I have to have consequences for my actions too. 🤬

  • @fishercourt
    @fishercourt 11 дней назад +15

    I’m not aware that any child with special needs do not have to follow the law. Three times hacking into the school’s computer system is illegal. The child needs to be held responsible for his own actions and by his grandmother blaming the school rather than teaching her grandson that it’s wrong to do so, is a mistake.

    • @DagNeb_It
      @DagNeb_It 11 дней назад +1

      there are laws that do! Need remember autism is a disability and sometimes they cannot control their curiosity or actions. That why it is a disability. Imagine kicking someone out because they have Tourette’s.

    • @lapurdy71
      @lapurdy71 10 дней назад +3

      @@DagNeb_It Autism a vague conglomeration. There is a lot of variation and your claim that they can't control their curiosity or actions has virtually no basis and certainly isn't part of the primary set of diagnosis criteria.

    • @marcia1248
      @marcia1248 10 дней назад +2

      ​@DagNeb_It guess if he had bought a gun to school and harm another student if his disability will be used as an excuse.

    • @patskellie747
      @patskellie747 8 дней назад

      You have no idea what discipline techniques used in his home!

    • @lapurdy71
      @lapurdy71 8 дней назад

      @@patskellie747 Sounds like we do. Say person X has a kid who picked the lock to the school and was caught 3x. When the guardian blames the victim of her child (1. should have added more security and 2. should take his diagnosis into account), she gives a pretty clear picture of the discipline that is happening.

  • @ProfCryptid
    @ProfCryptid 10 дней назад +5

    I know this kid personally! What he did he should still get kind of punished for, but he did not "hack into the district servers" as they are trying to say he did. All he did was open a folder on one of the SCHOOL OWNED laptops, which showed EVERY SINGLE STUDENT ID of anyone who had EVER logged in.

  • @Thesauceman-dh9qd
    @Thesauceman-dh9qd 10 дней назад +7

    He's still only a teen. It would be more helpful to help him learn from this experience while he's still young, so he doesn't have to in the future.

  • @imsoeepy
    @imsoeepy 10 дней назад +5

    im friends with this guy🙏

  • @theouterlimits7788
    @theouterlimits7788 11 дней назад +5

    While it's true actions have consequences they should have provided him an opportunity to use his skills in a positive manner rather than just reprimanding him the first two times

    • @lapurdy71
      @lapurdy71 11 дней назад +1

      I hope you're not a parent! Rewarding kids for bad behavior that takes ability isn't a winning tactic. I hope you don't have a kid who is a call of duty savant.

    • @96bars18
      @96bars18 10 дней назад +1

      ⁠@@lapurdy71 I’d be proud af if my son or daughter became a call of duty savant.

    • @theouterlimits7788
      @theouterlimits7788 10 дней назад +3

      @@lapurdy71 i am puzzled by your argument. If a child his age was able to break the school security multiple times; clearly the kid got skills. So rather than just pass punishment you have to also provide an alternative way for the child to use his skills. Just punishment does not resolve problems. I hope you will be careful enough not to just be punishing your children. That will be the easiest way to get one way ticket to nursing home.

    • @lapurdy71
      @lapurdy71 10 дней назад

      @@theouterlimits7788 Most hacking is gaining outside knowledge of a password, recognizing a trivial flaw, or utilizing 3rd party software. It isn't beyond the average person to hack a low security system if they were determined and spent some time learning. Even if the kid was a super genius, rewarding bad behavior is a stupid policy at the individual and social level. If he were good at picking locks and broke into the school, it could indicate sensitive touch and fine grade dexterity. Or a lockpick gun (equivalent to the 3rd party hacking software). These aren't things you reward. I do agree that the school should offer education that is more tailored to the individual's level, but using illegal behavior to prompt that for a specific child is a TERRIBLE IDEA.

  • @diegocortez3196
    @diegocortez3196 10 дней назад +4

    He should be rewarded. Companies hire people to do this to their own systems all the time.
    On another note… WHY DOES HER MIC LOOK LIKE THAT???😂 ANF FIX IT ASAP!

  • @phonyxmaster
    @phonyxmaster 10 дней назад +5

    bru no way havi 😂😂😂

  • @plowe6751
    @plowe6751 10 дней назад +1

    Impressive that a level 2 could do that. I would like to see a level 3 do that. Now that would be really impressive.

  • @thelobb
    @thelobb 11 дней назад +7

    Does he want a job? I've got $20 an hour. Hacking into a computer system come on that should get you a job somewhere not a punishment if he's that capable.

    • @pearlsswine
      @pearlsswine 11 дней назад +2

      $20/hour is fkn peanuts lol. Of course you'd immediately try and exploit him with slave wages.
      A mediocre programmer could make $35/hour easily.

  • @adonaimaranatha
    @adonaimaranatha 11 дней назад +11

    He’s a genius, he gets bored easily. He doesn’t need to attend school with people who can’t hack. He needs to go college an learn computer science not a regular school with boring average kids.

  • @thatonewaffle7146
    @thatonewaffle7146 10 дней назад +5

    blame the student for finding and hacking through it instead of protecting the students by locking the users folder behind admin permission.

  • @itsmeskullyhorizon
    @itsmeskullyhorizon 10 дней назад +4

    Hes Cooked😮‍💨

  • @user-cx9sp4wv7d
    @user-cx9sp4wv7d 10 дней назад +4

    yo havi

  • @DagNeb_It
    @DagNeb_It 11 дней назад +4

    I get the point of the grandmother, sometimes I cannot control my curiousity. This is why it’s called a disability. As a kid I took apart of parents working refrigerator, my dads laptop, all my guitars, iPod gen 1, cellphones. Heck my neighbor calls me up just help him take apart things. He needs to be punished, but the grandmother is right in thinking about him, not just the actions

    • @lapurdy71
      @lapurdy71 8 дней назад

      NO, that is NOT "why it's called a disability."

  • @001cath
    @001cath 11 дней назад +4

    How is her grandson the victim? It's the school's fault for providing computers and her grandson able to hack the system? 🤷‍♀️if he can go to a normal school with his disability surely he can comprehend that he shouldn't do illegal things and not make excuses for him.

  • @Frank_horrigan_enclave
    @Frank_horrigan_enclave 7 дней назад

    Yo wsg havi

  • @pearlsswine
    @pearlsswine 11 дней назад +9

    Lol, women and accountability are like oil and water lol.
    "Noooo it's your fault for making it possible for him to commit a crime! "
    "You must treat my grandson with equality but only when it suits us! Not in this case!"

    • @datrill1000
      @datrill1000 11 дней назад +2

      💯!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

  • @kanibist8330
    @kanibist8330 11 дней назад +3

    Oh so now we don't have to follow the law if we have certain disabilities? I guess parents monitoring their kids especially the *gifted* ones is to much to expect, eh?

    • @falcfvr20
      @falcfvr20 10 дней назад +2

      Seems to work for Democrats. 😊