13661928665?profile=RESIZE_400xIn the world of multi-billion-dollar deals and backroom secret operations, a new target has been exposed. A target so rich in data and promise of years of profit that corporations are guarding it with their lives.

Many outsiders have no idea who or what the new corporate target can be. Some speculate it is foreign investors or perhaps some little-known government agency ready to spend billions of tax dollars.

But all the speculations fall short compared to the jackpot fat-cat corporations are now harvesting. To be direct, there is a flat-out new gold rush in corporate espionage, and you won’t believe their new target—it is your children!

For decades, corporate espionage conjured images of men in suits wiretapping boardrooms or hacking into a rival company’s servers under the cover of darkness. The stakes were always high: trade secrets, product blueprints, and internal strategies. Spying on other corporations was a common practice.

But a new, far more disturbing frontier of corporate surveillance has emerged. This time, the target isn’t a Fortune 500 competitor or a foreign conglomerate.

To make it clear, they want to know everything about your children, but it doesn’t stop there. Billion-dollar corporations are turning the classrooms into a Trojan horse.

A former schoolteacher has blown the whistle on what she describes as "the most pervasive and insidious form of surveillance capitalism we’ve ever seen," in a chilling revelation that’s sending shockwaves through the education and tech sectors. No longer content with just adult data, tech giants have turned their sights toward K-12 students under the guise of "digital learning."

The mother of all jackpots is cashing in on kids! At the heart of the controversy is a legal loophole buried in educational policy that allows private education technology (edtech) companies to be legally designated as school officials. This designation grants them unrestricted access to student data, without parental consent and with minimal oversight.

The implications are staggering, but the ramifications are frightening! Understand this. Many corporate giants have designed their children’s software as nothing less than spyware disguised as educational tools.

The teacher, who resigned mid-year from her position due to ethical concerns, names a host of popular platforms; even the widely trusted names seem to be all in it together. These platforms are deeply integrated into school systems and touted as modern learning tools. But according to her, and supported by mounting public evidence, they are doing far more than delivering math problems or vocabulary quizzes.

They're tracking everything:

  • Search history
  • Clicks and keystrokes
  • Facial expressions and emotional states (via webcams and AI emotion recognition)
  • Races, genders, and learning disabilities
  • Behavioral trends and disciplinary actions

This data is then aggregated, analyzed, and, allegedly, sold or shared with major tech companies.

The puppet master’s behind this operation? Fat-cat billionaire names that are on the front page every day. Figures whose philanthropic facades mask some of the most aggressive data collection empires in modern history.

High-paid top Attorneys have discovered a legal loophole that opened the floodgates of child surveillance. The cornerstone of this corporate intrusion is the redefinition of what constitutes a “school official” under the Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act (FERPA). Originally passed in 1974 to protect student privacy, FERPA has been twisted by policy language allowing third-party contractors to access student records, so long as they are deemed to be performing an educational service on behalf of the school.

That means a private tech company can sign a contract with a school district and legally begin collecting and storing intimate information on your child, all without you ever being informed, let alone giving consent.

A seemingly shadowy system designed to exploit, not educate, is now installed and watching our children's, every mouse click, every tag, and every interface data point flowing into the vast, growing database of unknown mega-corporations. And what actions will they take if the data is compromised? Heaven knows.

“This isn’t education anymore. It’s exploitation,” the teacher warns. “The system is not broken. It was built this way.” She’s referring to the factory-model roots of public schooling, an industrial-age relic designed to produce compliant workers, not critical thinkers. And now, with the advent of data-centric edtech, this model is being supercharged by AI, machine learning, and behavioral analytics.

The result? Children as young as five are being profiled, tracked, and conditioned before they even understand what privacy means.

This begs the question. What Can Parents Do?

If you’re a parent, it’s easy to feel powerless, but there are steps you can take:

  1. Request transparency: Ask your school for a list of all edtech tools being used and review their data privacy policies.
  2. Opt-out: Some states and districts allow for data tracking opt-outs. Push for those rights.
  3. Pressure policymakers: Demand legislation that closes the FERPA loophole and protects student data.
  4. Educate your child: Talk to them about online privacy, even at an early age.

Corporate espionage has evolved. It’s no longer just boardrooms and patents under siege; it’s children in classrooms, their clicks and emotions silently harvested by billion-dollar behemoths in Silicon Valley.

Final Word: Our children have morphed into products, and education is no longer the goal. Control is.

13642435074?profile=RESIZE_400x

 

 

You need to be a member of Command Center to add comments!

Join Command Center

Email me when people reply –

Replies

  • Thank you members! https://canadafreepress.com/article/stealthfat-cat-corporations-spy...

    Remember our articles are now traveling the world and many groups pick it up from second and third reposts on other websites. 

    Good job! 

  • Let's not attack US corporations that are under attack in Europe already. They need our support and also the tax breaks from the Big Beautiful Bill.

    • I guess it's not just Trump who cannot do wrong, but American companies cannot do wrong either! I hope you are married and feel the same way about your wife.

  • Unplug from all data sources!!!

  • I will add that for every on-line project required for any age student, the sexual advertisments are right there on every page. So, the manipulation is at multiple levels. As I have said, advertising leads. And children in homes today, are NOT being taught, monitored, guided and protected. Schools have no moral boundaries unless on the top level. And yes, the kids are currency, being groomed in one way or the other. You can't put women as sexualized objects and not have that affect young girls. Selling the 'sex sells' image. It would be something else, if schools taught kids to model after moral behavior, moral ideals, family unity, emotional strength. But they don't. And the culture now demands social digital media interraction. Not good.

    Parents would have to not allow phones in order to block perversive views, ads, stories and idolotry of sexual permissiveness as a social standard.

    • You made a good point! 

This reply was deleted.