Schools' safety tools are spying on kids -- even at home

FOX News 

A new system called Scanary uses AI and radar to scan up to 25,000 people an hour. School is back in session, but here's something no one told you at orientation: Your kids may have more eyes on them than just their teachers'. Even if you don't have kids in school, you really need to know about this. A new study from UC San Diego uncovered what's really going on with those student safety tools schools buy. You know, the ones that are supposed to stop bullying, flag mental health struggles and prevent school shootings?