Comment by gchamonlive

2 days ago

Who'd have guessed hitting the library would become an act of rebellious defiance

How is hitting the library an act of rebellious defiance? Getting a library card requires an ID and proof of address. The library then tracks which books you've signed out. Unless you're reading the books inside the library without signing them out.

  • My library, at least, is fanatical about their patron's privacy.

    I don't know what their retention time is on circulation records, but beyond aggregate statistics for culling materials that aren't circulating I bet it isn't too long. Now I want to go check.

    My library also only keeps 24 hours of video surveillance because they didn't want to be able to fulfill requests from the cops for footage of patrons. I really liked that.

    Edit: In the patron portal it permits me to disable "borrowing history" and says it permanently deletes my records. I do contract IT work for them so next time I'm engaged I'll ask about the details. They're moving to Koha later this year (free / open-source ILS) so I could go look at the code to see what it does (which is nice).

    On the theme of their privacy fanaticism:

    Over a decade ago the library got a grant to do outdoor public WiFi in the park behind their building. As part of that grant they needed to report the number of distinct users using the WiFi each day. Their UniFi controller tracks MAC addresses of associated stations. I used a query against the underlying MongoDB to get the usage reports to satisfy the grant.

    To minimize the potential of tracking individual users the library director had me write a script to grovel thru MongoDB, do a SHA-1 hash of each public MAC address tracked concatenated with a randomly-generated salt for that day, then write back the first 48 bits of the hash over the original MAC. The library gets their daily statistics and long-term traffic trend data, they don't double-count associations for the same device in the same day, but they can't track individual people over a span of multiple days.

    Now that devices randomly-generating MACs are mainstream it's much less necessary. I thought it was really cool she thought this. (The whole salting/hashing bit was my idea. She just wanted to be able to fulfill the grant reporting requirements amd be unable to track people.)

  • A library is supported by local property taxes, so requiring proof of residence serves a practical purpose. Of course they are going to track loaned books too. This is not the same thing, by any stretch. If they are somehow making that information available beyond the scope of the library system it is a breach of trust.

Do you know any librarians? Public libraries have always been a bit punk rock.

  • Punk rock has always been right wing. Libraries are about as far from this as they can get.

    • Has always been anarchical, so in essence it's in opposition to any form of authority that's predominant at the time. It makes zero sense to call it left or right wing.

    • The anti-authoritarian, anti-government, anti-fascist, anti-capitalist music genre punk rock? Always right wing?

      I mean, Nazis have always been attracted to punk because they like the loud noise but are too stupid to understand lyrics, but they tend to get their shit kicked in by punks more often than not. I don't think that's the same thing.

      5 replies →

"You know what the most dangerous thing in America is, right? N* with a library card."

- Brother Mouzone / Ed Burns & David Simon, The Wire (2003) S2E10 "Storm Warnings"

The scene is apparently on YT, though ... you'll have to sign in to confirm your age to view it best I can tell:

<https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pCioIwagYxM>

(If this link works, you'll get the full unbowdlerised quote. For those unfamiliar with the series, the speaker is Black.)