TCAS false alerts

School AI Surveillance Leads to Student Arrest After Threatening Joke

The article details the case of a 13-year-old girl who was arrested and incarcerated after making an offensive joke in an online chat, triggering her school’s surveillance software, Gaggle. This software, and similar programs used in numerous school districts, monitors students’ online activity, alerting officials and law enforcement to potential threats. While proponents argue this technology saves lives by identifying at-risk students, critics express concern about the potential for criminalizing careless words and over-policing students’ online interactions, as illustrated by the high rate of false alerts. This raises questions about the balance between safety and the constitutional rights of students.

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Reagan Airport Flights Trigger False Collision Alerts: FAA Investigates

On Saturday morning, multiple airliners approaching Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport received simultaneous false TCAS collision alerts, prompting at least three go-arounds. The FAA is investigating these unusual, widespread false alarms from the aircraft’s onboard collision avoidance systems, which occurred in clusters, with no visible threats present. While the exact number of affected flights remains unclear, the incidents involved several carriers and prompted speculation from pilots and controllers. The FAA reports the issue has not recurred since Saturday.

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