Showing posts with label freedom. Show all posts
Showing posts with label freedom. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 21, 2023

The State of Libraries

    Surveillance Capitalism (Zuboff), Digital Colonialism (Kwet), Social Credit (Lee), Datafication (Lycett). My many thoughts on Irresistible Bargains (Pallitto). The titles alone are creepy and insidious, and the articles are enough to make us lose sleep for decades. All of this is a vast landscape straight out of a William Gibson novel; as Lee pointed out, it inspired episodes in the dystopian Black Mirror. My own reading notes along the way are practically a novella.
    But what of libraries? The ALA's core competencies and the library bill of rights both position patron privacy as a foundational tenet of librarianship. I remember when the Patriot Act was introduced in 2001. Under the Patriot Act, the FBI can secretly conduct a physical search or wiretap on American citizens to obtain evidence of crime without proving probable cause, as the Fourth Amendment explicitly requires. One of the (many, many) avenues for discovery under the Patriot Act is a patron’s library use history. Most libraries don’t keep patron checkout records, and after the Patriot Act the ones that did simply toggled the software settings to stop doing that. Designers of library software in the years since the Patriot Act became law started including default settings to not collect or store any circulation or other history, such as requests for items through interlibrary loan. What is most concerning to me about the Patriot Act provisions is the idea that libraries (and other information providers such as bookshops, and possibly even publishers) are dangerous to the state, up to and including suborning terrorists.
While the explicit provisions of Patriot Act itself reflect a deep ignorance of librarians’ structural protections of patron privacy, laws allowing for state surveillance of patron activity and the history of their library activities are in direct conflict with the professional core and patron protections with which we are charged. 
With so much data integration being desired (and, as Pallitto would describe it, as irresistible), how do we provide information services while also protecting patron privacy? Libraries, like every organization, need to make data-driven solutions, which can be done in anonymized ways: Number of books checked out, number of discrete patrons, number of attendees at a program or event, etc. But patrons themselves want more personalized and visible participation: book reading challenges that are integrated through GoodReads or other apps, for instance, are ways to encourage and support community engagement. 
It seems that the core tenets of librarianship are coming into conflict along privacy and big-data fault lines: how are we to engage the community in ways that inspire and support increased library use while also protecting patrons--individually and as a group--from parasitic capitalism or state control programs? 
And, as state surveillance expands, what role does the library have in making documents available to the public that are deemed “too dangerous” for public use?

Sunday, June 18, 2023

Mountain People

 We live in freedom by necessity,

A mountain people dwelling amoung mountains.

--W. H. Auden, from Sonnets From China, "XVIII"

Monday, January 30, 2023

Number 5 will not surprise you

American Association of School Libraries updated Common Beliefs (2018):
https://standards.aasl.org/beliefs/ 
https://kappanonline.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/03/15pdk_99_7_tbl2.png
5. Intellectual freedom is every learner’s right.
Learners have the freedom to speak and hear what others have to say, rather than allowing others to control their access to ideas and information; the school librarian’s responsibility is to develop these dispositions in learners, educators, and all other members of the learn­ing community.”


Thursday, April 8, 2021

Endure

 
It is not those who can inflict the most but those who can endure the most who will conquer.
Terence Macswiney, Principles of Freedom

 

Tuesday, March 9, 2021

Libraries are dangerous arsenals of the free conscious

The first people a dictator puts in jail after a coup are the writers, the teachers, the librarians - because these people are dangerous. They have enough vocabulary to recognize injustice and to speak out loudly about it. Let us have the courage to go on being dangerous people." - Madeleine L'Engle 



Tuesday, February 23, 2021

It's not an emergency.

Emergencies are often excuses to ignore boundaries, eroding individual liberty and constraining agency. Real leadership prevents emergencies instead of nurturing and weaponizing them. 

P. S. Wearing a mask isn't an emergency, it's a safeguard. It's barely even an inconvenience. I'm looking at you, Texas and Mississippi.

 


Wednesday, December 23, 2020

Rebellion, Solidarity, and Justice




"The only way to deal with an unfree world is to become so absolutely free that your very existence is an act of rebellion."

The Way of democracy is the Utilitarian outcome of justice as public policy.

Democracy is Camus' rebellion made manifest for the good of all (utility) because from behind the veil of ignorance (Rawls), we would want a rebellion on the behalf of the marginalized because we might ourselves be members of the marginalized. And Camus'notion that we must imagine Sisyphus happy becomes the antithesis of the Stoic call to "keep calm and carry on" while hoping for a more just society.

We owe each other solidarity if we truly want freedom, which shows up in public policy as democracy, even if that solidarity cuts across the lines of privilege and causes us to sacrifice some of our personal present comfort

In so doing, we are freer, even though it might feel at first that we are more constrained.

Thursday, September 6, 2018

Libraries are About Freedom

Thank you, Neil Gaiman and Chris Riddell, for your beautiful article-in-pictures in the Guardian in defense of libraries and of librarians. 

Friday, June 30, 2017

Happy Independence Day

Happy Independence Day!


Thursday, August 11, 2016

The lighter path

After years of carrying others' worlds, juggling globes, my hands are now unencumbered.
After years of being chatelaine for castles in the sky, I relinquished the keys and my mind is clear.
After stripping off my armor of battles and wars waged from boardrooms to bedrooms, my heart is light.

My path is clear.

Naked and unafraid, I stand in calm certainty, knowing that if the ground should dissolve beneath me, I could fly.