Chloe, the golden girl, had a note attached to her profile: "Student frequently sleeps in class. Home situation flagged: parents divorcing, eviction notice on file. Recommend counselor intervention, not detention." The school had hidden it to protect her “brand.” Now, everyone saw Chloe wasn’t a snob—she was exhausted.
Westbrook High didn’t abandon Encompass. But Leo’s “Unblocked” glitch forced the district to rewrite the privacy rules. Now, students could see their own full files. Teachers could no longer hide punitive notes without a student’s knowledge. And once a month, the school held an “Open Feed Day”—where the filters dropped, and for one hour, everyone saw the real, messy, human truth behind the grades and the gossip.
But then he saw a new post in the live feed—not from a teacher, but from a freshman he’d never met. student management unblocked
The Unfiltered Feed
“I didn’t know Chloe was going through that. I’ve been mocking her all year. I’m sorry. Can we restart?” Chloe, the golden girl, had a note attached
For two years, Leo Chen had hacked the system only to change his lunch order from "mystery meat" to "edible protein." He was a minor annoyance. But on a sleepy Tuesday, while trying to bypass the school Wi-Fi firewall, he accidentally triggered an obscure developer backdoor:
Student management wasn’t about control anymore. Westbrook High didn’t abandon Encompass
Another post: “Derek, my brother does the same thing when he’s scared. You’re not a monster. You’re just loud.”