See an important update after the original post. From the no-one-could-have-possibly-foreseen-kids-figuring-out-default-password-conventions�dept., Andrew Colton reports: The palm Beach County schooling district is in the midst of a massive computer security crisis that draws into question the genuineness of every assignment completed by every pupil since distance learning began, after BocaNewsNow.com learned that an elementary schooling pupil hacked the schooltime districts parole system. We are not revealing the parole rule that is used in the school district, but the indorsement graders you are reading that correctly, the�second graders� hacking resulted in an emergency login change for live morning meetings in several elementary schools last week. It did not resultant yet in a district-wide reassignment of pupil passwords for the school Districts Portal which provides access to Google Classroom. Read more on Boca News Now. Update: It seems that the shoal district was less than thrilled with Boca intelligence Now qualification their situation public. The paper issued a second story claiming that they received a thinly veiled threat from the district. It is not clear from their reporting, though, what they are being threatened with or what they reportedly did wrong. Is the territory accusing them of encouraging a student to violate the student cipher of conduct because they prudently made sure to verify claims of a vulnerability before reporting on it? What did the news outlet make wrong? Nothing that I can see. What did the district do wrong? let me enumeration the ways, but for now, let’s just append poor incident response to the list. CORONAVIRUS: palm Beach school district Threatens BocaNewsNow Over Password narrative