The scope of the problem
This isn’t only about circling library wagons against the NSA. Who surveils library staff computers? In many K–12 environments, the answer is obvious and in some ways troublesome. To my surprise, however, schools are not the only library environment where employer surveillance may appear. When I asked, several librarians in academic and public libraries privately voiced suspicions to me that either library IT or the IT establishment in the library’s parent organization was logging behavior on work computers. Even more troublesome: they did not know what was and wasn’t logged, had no available policy on the question, and could not find out more. I don’t find this uncertainty indicative of what the Code of Ethics terms “respect, fairness, and good faith." My entirely unscientific and not-to-be-relied-upon information gathering for this column suggested that surveillance may be more common when library IT is not controlled by the library. This makes intuitive sense. Not only do many corporate, government, and academic IT centers not share library ethics, they operate under different constraints and directives. A library, for example, can push back against overreaching copyright enforcement directives; we understand fair use and consider fair-use advocacy part of our mission. When the RIAA, a major serials publisher or aggregator, or similar copyright-owner interests lean on IT, however, IT has little choice but to make the problem go away with minimal hassle and minimal legal risk to the larger institution. This is liable to mean surveillance (in the form of log monitoring at minimum) and no-longer-neutral web access. As for warding off surveillance from private interests, I’ve been teaching my Digital Trends students about the commercial web-tracking establishment and available techniques to defeat it for years. When I asked Twitter and FriendFeed whether any libraries had defended against this surveillance by adding antitracking plugins to the web browsers in stock patron or staff computer configurations, however, I came up completely empty. I found that both unexpected and troubling. I would dearly love comments here from librarians who have considered this issue and implemented privacy-protecting measures in their libraries! Ignorance is part of the problem, certainly. My own wake-up call came a couple of weeks ago, when I interviewed Brendan O’Connor, a student in the University of Wisconsin-Madison School of Law, about the cheap, Tarot-deck-sized Wi-Fi surveillance box he calls the “F-BOMB” along with its monitoring system CreepyDOL, built as a proof-of-concept assessment of the privacy threats involved in much normal everyday network use. Before talking to Brendan, I hadn’t any notion how much data Wi-Fi-enabled devices such as laptops, tablets, and smartphones regularly and unstoppably leak, nor how oblivious to personal-data leakage many websites (including librarian favorites such as newsfeed readers) are. Supposedly I teach technology! If there’s this much I don’t know, when I make constant and regular effort to keep up with technology-related privacy issues, I can’t help but be concerned about the level of awareness in librarianship generally. How can we decide what to do about a phenomenon we don’t understand?What to do?
That we as a profession have a duty to advocate with legislators and technology providers for better privacy protection in communication protocols, on websites, and in mobile platforms seems beyond question. Frustrated with the stalemate he perceives in the technology establishment around personal privacy, Brendan O’Connor suggested to me that privacy protection could be usefully framed as a consumer safety issue. I think that is a promising approach, but I see no reason standard library ethical stances around personal privacy as an inescapable component of intellectual freedom and citizenship cannot make themselves heard as well. Available fixes are highly technical, of course, but the needed advocacy to force the technology establishment into making those fixes relies on exactly the sort of ethical suasion at which libraries and their professional organizations excel. What immediate technical fixes could libraries implement? When I brought up browsing privacy on FriendFeed, librarian Aaron Tay of the National University of Singapore wondered whether I was advocating that all libraries place their computers on the (possibly NSA-compromised, but still best-of-breed) TOR anonymizer network. I’ve used TOR now and then, so I know it stresses bandwidth and degrades the apparent responsiveness of web browsing somewhat; I don’t doubt many of our patrons would find this an unacceptable trade-off. Stephen Francoeur of Baruch College noted that antitracking browser plugins, if poorly chosen or poorly configured, could block cookies that some websites require in order to function properly. Both critiques have merit. To my mind, libraries can consider a continuum of responses, with universal TOR implementation, perhaps allied with a draconian Javascript-killer like NoScript that is known to break many websites, on the extreme (and doubtless unfeasible) end. On the other end of the continuum lies pure education: block nothing, explain everything. The website “Terms of Service; Didn’t Read,” which grades the quality of the privacy policies at many commonly used websites, offers a plugin for many popular browsers (Internet Explorer excluded, unfortunately) that puts its grades right in the browser interface for perusal. Some antitracking plugins, Ghostery for example, can be configured not to block but to display information about which trackers are active during a web browsing session. I encourage everyone who works in libraries to investigate and test these plugins, at home if not at work! Let us share what we learn, so that librarianship as a whole starts to frame a digital privacy strategy. Where is the middle course? The “Do Not Track” browser preference, lackadaisical though support for it is, is worth triggering by default just as a statement of intent. Antitracking plugins are well worth considering for library staff and patron machines also. I’ve been using them for some years and hardly ever notice browsing problems. On the rare occasion a site does break, the fix is generally a two-click temporary disabling of the antitracking plugin for that site, something I hope could be relatively easily taught to reference and tech support staff. Wi-Fi security is rather weak still, and its implementation unquestionably creates tech support issues, but with a heavy heart I confess it now seems preferable to open access points to me. As for surveillance closer to home, at a minimum, libraries owe their staff transparent policy and procedure. Even libraries with no choice but to surveil staff, as in many schools, should be straightforward about what is happening. Even libraries that don’t control their own computers can challenge IT to be transparent and to protect privacy whenever possible. We can at least avoid turning into mini-NSAs, hiding snooping behind silence and obfuscation! It is true that some antitracking technologies create browsing hassles. It’s also true that institutions we favor and rely upon, such as news media, themselves rely on tracking to improve their balance sheets as they move online. Finally, it’s true that some digital invasions of privacy are well beyond our control. As I thought about all this, though, I found myself repeating “not in libraries, not here” over and over under my breath. The NSA may, legally or no, track the web traffic of foreign nationals, catching many American citizens in the backwash, but not here. Advertisers may compile behavior portfolios for promiscuous sale but not here. Social media may track their users across the entire web but not here. Digital panopticons may spring up like weeds but not here. Not here. Here, in libraries, privacy should be the default.We are currently offering this content for free. Sign up now to activate your personal profile, where you can save articles for future viewing
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