Get Free Shipping on orders over $79
User Privacy : A Practical Guide for Librarians - Matthew Connolly

User Privacy

A Practical Guide for Librarians

By: Matthew Connolly

Paperback | 19 January 2018

At a Glance

Paperback


RRP $130.00

$118.75

or 4 interest-free payments of $29.69 with

 or 

Ships in 25 to 30 business days

Personal data in the online world -- used by apps, given to social media sites, stored in the cloud -- has become a commodity. Coveted by criminals, demanded by governments, and used for unsavory purposes by marketers and advertisers, your private information is at risk everywhere. For libraries and librarians, this poses a professional threat as well as a personal one. How can we protect the privacy of library patrons and users who browse our online catalogs, borrow sensitive materials, and use our public computers and networks?

User Privacy: A Practical Guide for Librarians answers that question. Through simple explanations and detailed, step-by-step guides, library professionals will learn how to strengthen privacy protections for:

*Library policies *Wired and wireless networks *Public computers *Web browsers *Mobile devices *Apps *Cloud computing

Each chapter begins with a "threat assessment" that provides an overview of the biggest security risks - and the steps that can be taken to deal with them. Also covered are techniques for preserving online anonymity, protecting activists and at-risk groups, and the current state of data encryption.
Industry Reviews
In light of recent headlines about the data breaches at Facebook, Equifax, etc., public concern about the security of personal information is at an all-time high. Libraries have a duty to take precautions to protect patrons' privacy. This guide summarizes the issues involved in user privacy. The threats to user privacy have increased tremendously since records and library catalogs were first computerized many years ago. Connolly (Cornell Univ. Library) offers recommendations for developing a library privacy policy based on guidelines from the American Library Association. Most of the book focuses on the technical aspects of strengthening a library’s technology infrastructure based on the policy chosen. Securing browsers used by the public and library systems (patron records, online public access catalogs, and ransomware, for example) are of particular concern. In the last several years, users have begun connecting their mobile devices to library wireless networks, posing more complex issues for network security. This book serves well as an overview of the subject for library managers or library IT personnel; Connolly provides sources for additional reading and guidance for those wishing to delve further into a particular subject.



Summing Up: Highly recommended. Graduate students and all library professionals.

More in Automation of Library & Information Services

Ethics, Information, and Technology : A Tangled Web - Kip Currier

RRP $110.00

$96.75

12%
OFF
Digital Asset Management for Museums : American Alliance of Museums - Jessica Herczeg-Konecny
Theories and Practices of Information Literacy - Charles Inskip

RRP $231.00

$202.75

12%
OFF
Data and Information : Organization and access - G. G. Chowdhury

RRP $231.00

$202.75

12%
OFF
Library Technical Services : Future Forward - Mary Beth  Weber

RRP $140.00

$126.75

The AI Toolkit for Librarians - Mike McQueen
The AI Toolkit for Librarians - Mike McQueen
Along Came Google : A History of Library Digitization - Deanna Marcum