September 2000

Show Being Retooled

Dr. Laura Schlessinger\’s new television show is ailing.


The \”Dr. Laura\” syndicated talk show has drawn low ratings and protests from gay activists, and now production has been stopped for a week, officials said.


Show spokeswoman Linda Lipman said the move was part of a pre-planned hiatus. But it is surprising because the show premiered only last week.


The break will give Paramount a chance to retool the daytime show, according to Friday\’s Los Angeles Times and the New York Post.


From AP

World’s Largest Library ?

Feedmag has an Interview with Brewster Kahle the founder of Alexa who has built what they claim is the largest library in the world. They have collected thirty terabytes of data, archiving both the web itself, and the patterns of traffic flowing through it on their servers. It\’s interesting to what he considers a library, and how much it costs to catalog a book (hint:he says that\’s a bad thing)

\”In just three years we got bigger than the Library of Congress, the biggest library on the planet,\” he says, arms outstretched, smiling. \”So the question is: What do we do now?\”

Feedmag has an Interview with Brewster Kahle the founder of Alexa who has built what they claim is the largest library in the world. They have collected thirty terabytes of data, archiving both the web itself, and the patterns of traffic flowing through it on their servers. It\’s interesting to what he considers a library, and how much it costs to catalog a book (hint:he says that\’s a bad thing)

\”In just three years we got bigger than the Library of Congress, the biggest library on the planet,\” he says, arms outstretched, smiling. \”So the question is: What do we do now?\”
More from Feedmag

We now have about thirty terabytes of archival material that we data mine. And that\’s 1.5 times the size of all of the books in the Library of Congress. So we\’re now at an interesting point, we\’re now beyond the largest collection of information ever accumulated by humans. We\’ve gotten somewhere! [laughs] We use as our original inspiration the Library of Alexandria. Because they were the first people that tried to collect it all. And they started to actually understand the intersection between completely different self-consistent belief systems. They knew what the Egyptians, Romans and Greeks, Hebrews, Hittites, Sumerians, Babylonians — they knew the mythologies, because they had it all in one place. And they had the scholars to stare at it and try to make the disjunctions conjunctions and start to get an idea of what humans are. The dream is that we\’re in another one of those positions. They got up to five hundred thousand books. Of course, they were scrolls. The Library of Congress — the largest library now — is seventeen million. Only thirty four times more than what we had in 300 B.C. It indicates that the technology hasn\’t scaled. But now we\’ve broken through into a new technology that allows us to bypass the Library of Congress in very little time, and the sky\’s the limit. What can we discover about ourselves as a species? As different peoples? Are we couch potatoes or do we actually have independent will? Do we have interests that go beyond the fifteen demographics of slotted marketing hell? And what we\’re finding is, people are interesting, diverse and peculiar. They are constantly looking for new things that are of interest to them.


KAHLE: Oh, yes. Auto-cataloging is the only way to scale. It costs forty-five dollars to catalog a book in terms of just taking author, title, when it was copyrighted, what subject index should it go into. Forty-five dollars! The Web is about twenty million different sites in terms of content areas that sort of make sense to catalog — and it\’s growing at an astounding rate. That would mean if you tried to catalog it by hand and tried to scale it the size of the Net, that you\’d have to spend almost a billion dollars to catalog the Web today. And a year from now, you\’ll have to spend another billion dollars. And it won\’t be up to date. So we needed new techniques. The search engine work that was done in the sixties by Gerald Saltman and Mike Lesk — phenomenal work. It\’s been doing great. But if we\’re really going to get an idea of what the Net looks like — when every suburb of Denpasar is on the Web and that their soccer team schedules are on the Net, and you\’re trying to find where the game is, how are you going to find it by typing a few key words? You\’re not. You\’re going to have to have these tools that go and say: \”these are the suburbs of Denpasar on our Web sites.\” It has to be automated, otherwise my worst nightmare is it all becomes five thousand channels of nothing on the Web.

Plant Getting Pulled

A suggested Story from Salon.com on \”The Plant\”. The latest numbers showed that just under 70 percent of those downloading \”The Plant\” paid for it. Mr. King has set 75 percent as the minimum for him to continue after part three, which will be available on his Web site Monday. Pay up!

Old World Thinking Pulls Brave new World

Someone sent in this Story from Salon on a complaint from a parent that prompted school officials to pull Aldous Huxley\’s novel \”Brave New World\” from library shelves in Alabama. \”Brave New World\” ranks 54th on the ALA\’s list of the top 100 books drawing complaints during the 1990s.

\”Kathleen Stone of Elberta filed the complaint in letters to the school and Gov. Don Siegelman. She said Wednesday the novel\’s references to orgies, self-flogging, suicide and the characters\’ contempt for religion, marriage and family do not make it a good choice for high school students.


\”When you\’re a college student, it\’s one thing, but I don\’t think too much of assigning this to high school students,\” Stone said.

Friday Updates

Friday updates for this week include antique newspaper dispute, Fool\’s Gold, Book banning is bad, Library Opera, digital revolution, e-books, and much, much, more. Enjoy!!

Friday updates for this week include antique newspaper dispute, Fool\’s Gold, Book banning is bad, Library Opera, digital revolution, e-books, and much, much, more. Enjoy!!

From Mediainfo.com

ANTIQUE NEWSPAPER DISPUTE MOVES TO FEDERAL COURT

\”A federal judge on Friday ruled that a dispute over the sale of a 224-year-old South Carolina newspaper issue that reported on the signing of the Declaration of Independence must be reviewed in U.S. District Court in New York before a related suit in South Carolina can move forward.\”

From Alliance for Childhood

Fool\’s Gold: A Critical Look at Computers in Childhood

\”This report grew out of a February 1999 gathering in Spring Valley, New York – the founding of the U.S. branch of the Alliance for Childhood. The Alliance is an international effort of educators, physicians, and others who are deeply concerned about the plight of children today, and who believe that only by working together in a broad-based partnership of individuals and organizations can they make a significant difference in the lives of children.\”

From Bloomberg.com

Rakow Research Library Opens at N.Y.\’s Corning Museum of Glass

\”The Juliette K. and Leonard S. Rakow Research Library, the world\’s most comprehensive library on the art and history of glass, has opened at the Corning Museum of Glass in Corning, New York.

Designed by Bohlin Cywinski Jackson, the new library provides improved facilities for researchers, as well as expanded storage for collections and more efficient work areas.\”

From the Calgary Herald

Book banning is bad

\”Re \”Parents object to \’witchcraft\’ in Potter books\” Calgary Herald Sept. 9.
The article outlined the Durham (Ont.) school board\’s decision to restrict teachers from using Harry Potter books in class unless all parents\’ pupils agreed to them being studied. Here we go again — 22 years ago in Ottawa, Of Mice and Men by John Steinbeck and Who Has Seen the Wind by W. O. Mitchell were in danger of being banned from schools because some felt the books were dirty and offensive. These books are considered classics and are studied in classes for their literary merit.\”


From USA Today

Censoring \’Potter\’ sets bad precedent

\”On Sept 6, an outrageous column by Linda Harvey appeared in USA TODAY (\’\’Protect our kids,\’\’ Opposing view, Back-to-school censorship debate).

Her argument was that reading books in J.K. Rowling\’s Harry Potter series leads to \’\’heightened rebellion and spellcasting,\’\’ and she called on schools to keep the First Commandment in mind when deciding what books to allow in school libraries. She went on to equate \’\’tolerance\’\’ with \’\’chaos,\’\’ and accuse Rowling of attempting to entice children into witchcraft.\”

From the Chicago Tribune

LIBRARY BRINGS LYRIC ALIVE

\”People go to libraries to learn about endless numbers of topics, but in Naperville, they can go to the library to learn about opera. And not just opera recorded on compact discs, but real opera, performed by full-time library employees.\”

From Cnn.com

Book industry adapts to digital revolution

\”Unless you\’ve been sleeping as soundly as a princess for the past six months, it\’d be impossible not to notice that summer 2000 was the season the electronic book finally barged into public consciousness like a battering ram.\”

From tha Courier Press

‘E-books,’ fad or the future of literature?

\”

Imagine driving down the highway in a car with the windows blacked out.
The only way you can tell where you’re going is by looking into the rear-view mirror.

That’s the analogy English professor Roger Easson uses to describe the speed and uncertainty of the electronic publishing world.\”

From Newscoast.com

Water leak closes Selby library

\”Hurricane Gordon drenched Southwest Florida on Sunday morning, but the storm had nothing to do with perhaps the worst water damage in Sarasota County.\”

From Deseret News

Historic church is being transformed into a city library

\”When the new city library is completed, it will still look a century old. But the restored church will have spiffed-up red brick walls, Gothic windows and decor. Under a new barrel vault ceiling, modern technology will provide quick access to information. The book collection will be expanded and there will be a glassed-in reading room.\”

From Computer User

Tracking Internet2

\”Visit the I2 web site http://www.internet2.edu, wade through the geek nomenclature, and you\’ll begin to get a sense of how I2 is eventually going to change your life. According to this site, the primary goals of I2 are to create a leading edge network capability for the national research community, enable a revolution in Internet applications, and ensure the rapid transfer of new network services and applications to the broader Internet community.

From the Detroit Free Press

Leonard Pitts Jr.: Illiteracy is what really scares me

\”The National Center for Education Statistics, a branch of the U.S. Department of Education, reports that in 1998, 38 percent of the nation\’s fourth-graders were below basic, the lowest level of reading ability. Nearly a quarter of high school seniors were similarly unable to perform.

So it\’s easy to understand why concerned parents would march down to the library and demand that something be done about witches.\”

B Buzz Highlights — Paper Books, Market Future

Ready for the weekend? Before you shut down the computer check out the Studio B
Buzz
highlights. A study predicts a strong book
publishing future but a survey shows that Internet users
prefer the paper kind….

Ready for the weekend? Before you shut down the computer check out the Studio B
Buzz
highlights. A study predicts a strong book
publishing future but a survey shows that Internet users
prefer the paper kind….Internet Users Prefer Paper Books
Associated Press: September 21, 2000. Of the more than 1,000 respondents to Publishers Weekly\’s \”Consumer Book
Buying Study 2000,\” all were Internet users who have
purchased a book from July 1999 untill July 2000. Nearly
all said that e-books would not replace the paper kind,
perhaps because only 60 percent were familiar with the new
medium. The survey showed a satisfaction rating of online
book buying to be 8.2 because of titles\’ availability and
the convenience. Amazon was the most popular online
bookseller.
Read the entire article.

Studies Predict Strong Book Market Future
Publishers Weekly: September 18, 2000. An entertainment and media industries growth prospects study by
PricewaterhouseCoopers predicts that during the next four
years the book publishing market will be hugely impacted by
electronic publishing. The report projects more than one
fourth of book sales will be e-books, print-on-demand
titles, or other material downloaded from the Internet.
Although it expects total spending on books will increase,
the study forecasts a 13.7 percent drop in print title sales
and expects that publishers\’ margins will still be
protected.
Read the entire article.

Pedal to work, get bike stolen

Brian writes \”Despite the mayor\’s enthusiasm for
bicycles-as-transportation, Chicago Public Library still
has no secure bike parking for employees. Chicago
Tribune
columnist Eric Zorn has the Story.
\”


He suggests, in part:

\”Put a cage around one of
those indoor parking spaces now used by an
environmentally unfriendly, traffic-thickening car and
make it a bike locker for employees; shove supplies
aside somewhere in the bowels of the building and
designate a bike parking area; or let employees park
their bikes near their work spaces.\”

The end of the internet?

Bob Cox sent in This Story from The BBC. Talks
about Journalist Alan Travis,who wrotea history of
censorship in the UK, \”Bound and Gagged, A Secret
History of Obscenity in Britain \”
. He seems to think
the internet will come under increasingly restrictive
laws.

\”Unfortunately, I think the great libertarian days
of cyberspace, whereby you can have a very powerful
medium beamed into every home which won\’t in some
way be limited in terms of what material comes
through, is over.\”

Bob Cox sent in This Story from The BBC. Talks
about Journalist Alan Travis,who wrotea history of
censorship in the UK, \”Bound and Gagged, A Secret
History of Obscenity in Britain \”
. He seems to think
the internet will come under increasingly restrictive
laws.

\”Unfortunately, I think the great libertarian days
of cyberspace, whereby you can have a very powerful
medium beamed into every home which won\’t in some
way be limited in terms of what material comes
through, is over.\”
More form the BBC

\”How to enforce the law hasn\’t really been the issue. It
has been possible to ban the importation of dirty books,
it has been possible to close down magazines that
were considered to be obscene, it has been possible
to close down video shops who sold dirty videos to
underage kids.

\”What now becomes difficult for the first time is how you
enforce those rules. The practical difficulties are what
makes it a bigger debate in some ways, and gives it the
potential for absolutely ludicrous cases and rough
justice.\”


If the wrong laws are adopted, he says, it could be the
end of the net as we know it.


\”This is a much more powerful medium, and one which
prides itself on universal access. But in the end it could
turn out, because of the desire of people to regulate its
content, to be one of the most narrow and restrictive in
some ways.\”

Children’s Privacy in the Library

Pam Force wrote a fantastic in-depth look at childrens privacy concerns in the library.


How do we define privacy? And what are the problems behind the complex issue of children\’s privacy in the library? Privacy can be defined as the ability to control information about one\’s self. Respecting the privacy of others is tantamount to accepting others as members of the human race. Once gaining privacy was as simple as closing the curtains, but no longer. The internet has made the issue of privacy a very personal one for every individual, not just those who use it.

Pam Force wrote a fantastic in-depth look at childrens privacy concerns in the library.


How do we define privacy? And what are the problems behind the complex issue of children\’s privacy in the library? Privacy can be defined as the ability to control information about one\’s self. Respecting the privacy of others is tantamount to accepting others as members of the human race. Once gaining privacy was as simple as closing the curtains, but no longer. The internet has made the issue of privacy a very personal one for every individual, not just those who use it.

How do we define privacy? And what are the problems behind the complex issue of children\’s privacy in the library? Privacy can be defined as the ability to control information about one\’s self. Respecting the privacy of others is tantamount to accepting others as members of the human race. Once gaining privacy was as simple as closing the curtains, but no longer. The internet has made the issue of privacy a very personal one for every individual, not just those who use it.


The constitution guarantees us certain rights, and it can be said that by reading between the lines of the constitution we will find that personal privacy is something that belongs to all of us. Does this include children? In society at large the concept of privacy seems to be exclusive to adults. Parents are encouraged and even expected to know about every aspect of their child\’s existence. Should children be provided with privacy when using the internet in the library? Should children be allowed to use the internet in the same manner as adults? When faced with a parent – child conflict over privacy in the library, what is the librarian\’s responsibility? Should parents be allowed to know what a child has checked out on their library card, or what internet sites the child has been viewing? Certainly the child would not be allowed to know what is borrowed on the parent\’s card, nor would the child be given any information regarding a parent\’s net search. So should we create options that allow parents/guardians access to a child\’s checkout/personal information records? This is an issue that can be confusing for librarians. Because parents are frequently asked to sign as responsible parties to a child\’s library card, the issues of financial responsibility and children\’s privacy are often intertwined in the minds of librarians despite the fact that they are truly separate issues. It becomes the responsibility of information professionals to become aware of the privacy needs of children as well as adults, and to educate themselves regarding children\’s privacy, as well as the role the library must take to protect the privacy of patrons of all ages.


If a child is required to have a parent sign as a legally responsible party for the library card, then don\’t the parents have the right to know what materials they are legally responsible for? The answer to that is usually no. Unless the child has given their permission, or the library has a written policy and disclaimer that allows parents access to the records of minors, the library has an ethical obligation to protect that child\’s privacy. There are ways around this; at Timberland Regional Library (TRL), due to the multiple dilemmas that occurred as a result of the no-access privacy policy, it was decided that a family-card would be instituted. The family card allows every member of the family to have a library card, all of which belong to only one card record with all the family members on it, so that all members of the family can view the borrowing records of currently checked-out items. The card application states that family members willingly give all others with the same card record permission to view the library record, and requires signatures of all involved. At TRL parents can obtain cards for children immediately after birth, the identification required being a visual siting by a librarian of the child involved. Parents can then use the card to check books out, but can not check the borrower record without the child\’s permission if they do not have the card number. Since often the child is not even old enough to speak, this can pose a problem. Hence the family card solution, allowing parents to circumvent the privacy issue.


What is the information professional\’s ethical responsibility ? Perhaps there should be a paternalistic attitude taken. If so, are we willing to take a fallibilistic view on the matter of children\’s privacy? How much privacy should a child have? Do children have the same needs for privacy as adults? Webster\’s defines privacy as a \”state of retirement, seclusion, freedom from interruption by others. Privacy implies freedom from the observation and association from others.\” In 1928 Justice Brandeis stated that privacy was quite simply the \”right to be let alone\” (dissenting opinion in Olmstead at 478(1928). The U.S. government defines privacy as the right to be free from intrusion by the government rather than privacy between individuals. But what about children? There are many instances when children and others who are not fully cognizant are not given the same consideration as others. Children may not vote, may not buy alcohol or tobacco, may not serve in the military. Should they be offered exactly the same services in the library as adults? Some libraries regularly infringe upon children\’s privacy, allowing adults who have signed permission for those children to have a library card to view the child\’s checkout record. Other libraries take a more liberal view, denying anyone but the cardholder access to the card records. Most people would agree that adults as a whole have a responsibility to protect children from harm. If we must protect children from harm, then we must also guard the privacy of children from invasion by those with intent to harm.


A concept that is central to children\’s need for privacy is the idea of cognition, self-awareness and thus self-responsibility. At what age is a child considered completely self-aware? Psychologically a young person is generally completely self-aware by the age of 15 or 16. A sense of self develops much sooner, however, generally in the preschool years as language begins to develop. Emerging self-awareness becomes apparent around the ages of 6-7. So how early should a child be allowed privacy in the library? With a graduated sense of self-awareness it would make sense to adopt a graduated privacy policy. A child of two or three simply does not have the cognitive skills necessary to establish and maintain any type of a relationship with a library without the help of a fully cognizant person. In this case it would make sense for privacy to be negligible. The party responsible for the young person needs to be responsible for that child\’s library use, including the library records regarding checked-out materials. This means that the responsible party must know what the child is reading or looking at on the computer. For a child between the ages of four to six a bit more discretion may need to be exercised. During these years language is becoming much more developed, and cognition as well is developing. A child of this age may not necessarily be depended on to remember what books they have checked out, and it is inappropriate to expect the child to be fully responsible for library use at this age. Here again we must look to the responsible adult party to monitor library use. Once a child reaches the age of six or seven, however, there is a definite emergence of a sense of self-identity and self-responsibility. At this age it would be appropriate to begin offering a limited amount of privacy. A child\’s library usage could be considered confidential – use of the library resources including books, computers and other materials. Once children reach the age of 11 or 12 it is appropriate for their records to become completely confidential. A child of that age is able to comprehend many of the ramifications of personal library use and responsibility for checked out materials.


The idea of a graduated-privacy rule is a reasonable one – the main problem that arises is when a parent feels that they should be able to know everything that their child does. The parent or guardian is responsible for that child until emancipation, and therefore does have certain legal rights. However, a child\’s need for privacy is undeniable. The four-year-old who doesn\’t want to share his thoughts; the 9-year-old who doesn\’t want to let anyone know she was reading about being a victim of child abuse; the 12-year-old who is surfing the net for information about hormonal changes in the human body: all these children should be allowed to keep their personal thoughts and feelings to themselves.


Children have a need for privacy online as well. The revised Children\’s Online Privacy Protection Act passed by the Federal government in April 2000 requires parental consent before children ages 12 and under may give away any personal information on the internet. This measure was enacted to protect children\’s personal privacy when using the internet. A child\’s need for privacy is something that is not always taken into consideration when drafting library internet policies. When dealing with internet issues some libraries that offer internet access to their patrons will draft one policy for adults and another for children in order to attempt to \’protect\’ them. Jefferson County Public Library (JCPL) in Colorado adopted a general policy for all users, but in practice librarians in the children\’s department are expected to act in a paternalistic manner, monitoring all internet computers for images deemed unsuitable to a children\’s room. The official policy states that:


\”Access to the Internet is offered to support Jefferson County Public Library\’s mission to make it easy for the people of Jefferson County to find and use the information they wantand need. Information available through the Internet enriches, broadens and complements the existing print and audio visual collections of the library. Since it is impossible to monitor all resources available on the Internet, library staff work at identifying and pointing to useful sources consistent with the library\’s mission and Collection Development Guidelines.


-As with other library materials, a child\’s use of the Internet is solely the responsibility of the child\’s parent or guardian.


-It is the responsibility of the user to respect copyright laws and licensing agreements and assume responsibility for payment of fees for any fee-based service.


-The Jefferson County Public Library\’s staff shall develop such rules and procedures as are necessary to ensure the fair and reasonable use of Internet resources.\”


Instead of offering a link to child internet-safety resources, there is on the JCPL homepage a site called KidsCay, which contains a number of librarian-chosen websites deemed safe for children. The policy of monitoring for images is one that was decided upon by the JCPL Children\’s Librarian Round Table group as a means of controlling internet use in children\’s rooms. It was decided that if patrons were viewing internet images that would not be found within the JCPL children\’s collection, that they would be asked to use adult terminals in the main portion of the library. Librarians in JCPL must be able to personally justify in their own minds the need for such paternalistic action.


The other side of this coin would be a complete lack of censorship. This position would be inappropriate for a children\’s department – otherwise why would we have separate collection selection-policies for children? The great difficulty is to decide what must be kept out. Each library will need to make its decisions based on community needs, as well as local and federal laws. Some library systems draft one internet use policy for all users and follow it to the letter. Timberland Regional Library (TRL) system in Washington state adopted a policy That states that :


\”Timberland Regional Library offers Internet access to its patrons as part of its mission to provide resources which reflect the great diversity of interests and opinions in our communities. Timberland Regional Library does not monitor and has no control over the information viewed through the Internet and cannot be responsible for its content. As with other library materials, parents or legal guardians are responsible for their minor children\’s use of the Internet.\” http://www.timberland.lib.wa.us/policy.htm


They then provide a link to a very informative site on Child Safety On The Internet at http://www.safekids.com/child_safety.htm as a means of providing information to parents and guardians who wish to provide a safe internet environment for their children. TRL\’s policy regarding the internet is one of complete access for all, and within the 27 library branches computer use is not monitored in any way other than for length of use, as long as patrons are not disturbing others. Internet filters are available for patrons to use if desired, as well as privacy screens for further protection of patron privacy. Terminals have been situated in such a manner that no passersby are be able to see what is on the screen without literally bending and peering over the shoulder of the user. Of course, this then means that those bent on wrongdoing practically have free


license to do so at the public library.


The governing idea in this case is that the library will assume its role as a provider of services and information, but that the responsibility of protection of children belongs to the parents. Efforts may be made to educate patrons to some extent regarding safety on the net and when using the library, but ultimately parents are in charge of their children, not the library or its staff. Should the library every take a paternalist attitude towards its young patrons? Perhaps in some instances. Should a child be blocked from using the internet as he/she sees fit simply because of their age? This is a decision best made by a child\’s parents, and the best solution may be for the parent to accompany the child during the net search. Keep in mind, and this is heresy here, that not all parents are fit (or, perhaps more realistically, not all parents are present and able to act.) Similarly, if the parent wants to know what books the child is checking out, then perhaps if the parent were to accompany the child during their visit to the library and assist in book selection there could be no questions regarding what has or has not been checked out.


According to Mill, if one takes a fallibilistic attitude, then one must give his/her best shot at solving the problem, and move on to the next thing. One must live with the possibility that one\’s decisions may be wrong. If libraries take this stance, and frequently they must, then we will all live with the possibility of error. In regards to the privacy of children, we certainly live with the possibility that our library policies may be wrong, but it is our responsibility to follow the needs of the community, not dictate to them.


While recognizing that the brunt of responsibility for minors falls upon the parents or guardians, we must also recognize that there is a real need for paternalistic action on the part of the library and staff in some cases. When a parent fails to provide appropriately paternal action, then someone needs to step in. ALA states, and many librarians concur, that it is not the responsibility of the library and staff, but rather the parents or guardians. But if the parents fail in their responsibilities, then it is appropriate for librarians or other paternal entities to step in. There is an implied ethical duty to prevent someone from self-injury, to provide preventative education in cases where those who are supposed to provide protective surroundings fail in their duties. It simply is not appropriate to allow a child to unknowingly harm itself. We would not stand by and watch a child jump from the top of a tall bookshelf, nor should we. Unfortunately current ALA policy regarding intellectual freedom seems to support such a role. ALA states \”Intellectual Freedom is the right of every individual to both seek and receive information from all points of view without restriction. \” Yet we are all aware that certain kinds of information can be very damaging to young minds.


There need to be mechanisms that allow parents to protect their children. Taking a hard-line \’NO ACCESS\’ stance with parents regarding their children\’s library records and use will do nothing to endear parents to the library, and may in fact cause patronage to fall off. As information professionals it is our responsibility to provide families with a middle ground, with procedures that allow full access if that is what is desired, yet provide a means for protecting young people. Graduated privacy rules can be a very useful method of allowing children to develop a sense of privacy and responsibility as they develop a sense of self, as well as allowing parents to grow used to the idea of their children\’s developing autonomy within the library. We must also be able to separate a parent\’s financial obligations from their needs for access. Finally, we must recognize that as a society we have an obligation to protect those who are unable to protect themselves, and that this must be done with the utmost respect for the privacy and humanity of those whom this obligation encompasses. After all, the children of today are the library users of tomorrow.


 


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Foil the Filters Contest

The Digital Freedom Network is running a contest to show how inadequate censoring software can be.

\”The purpose of the contest is to have a little more fun with something whose greatest accomplishment is as an object of ridicule. It\’s the Corvair of programming,\” said DFN Internet Development Director Alan Brown of censorware.

Full details are here