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Librarians to the Rescue

Duke Machesne writes "Citing concerns over materials being distributed to American students by the BSA, MPAA, and RIAA's evil minions, the American Library Association will begin distributing its own, more balanced material this winter. The material will deal with insignificant and oft-overlooked details like fair use. More information on Wired News."

4 of 280 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Go librarians! by michaeltoe · · Score: 5, Informative
    We barely used our libraries at school, we usually got our information off the web.

    This wasn't because the information in the libraries was bad (actually, it had a lot of good stuff), but as high school students we were generally lazy.

    Better than college though, where publishers will force people to buy whole new editions of math books just because they changed the order of the problems at the end of each chapter.

  2. We need your help by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    Librarians are getting overruled these days, not just by national directives such as the USA PATRIOT Act, but by activist governors.

    Last month the South Dakota governor removed a section of the state library Web site because it gave health advice to teens.
    http://www.usatoday.com/tech/webguide/internetlife /2004 4-07-13-sd-censor_x.htm

    This month the Kansas governor had rap CDs removed from all libraryies.
    http://edition.cnn.com/2004/SHOWBIZ/Music/08/06/li brary y.cdsettlement.ap/index.html

    A Librarian

  3. Re:No! Unfair! Confusing! by JimRay · · Score: 4, Informative

    They support porn access for kids and have a serious liberal slant and there are so many reasons I don't like them.

    Um, what? Porn access for kids? Can you point me to a link where the ALA advocates giving out porn to the kids that walk in their libraries? Google seems to be letting me down here.

    And the liberal bias thing - I just don't get it. Most librarians I know support smaller, less intrusive government, which seems pretty conservative to me.

    The occasional forays into politics that librarians have made in the past few years seem to be the moderating voices of reason, like questioning the value of having a government mandated censor at the firewall or letting the FBI see what books you check out without so much as warrant. These seem like valid questions to be raised, and if the government were suddenly making your job more difficult, while cutting your funding, I'd expect you to be raising similar questions, as a matter of patriotism.

    Or were you just being disengenuous?

    --
    My other computer is your Windows box
  4. More cheers for the ALA! by intnsred · · Score: 4, Informative

    While the story topic is nice, IMHO, the ALA's work in publicizing Ashcroft's demand that libraries remove information about certain US laws from their libraries is far, far more important of a public service!

    Everyone's favorite tyrant AG John Ashcroft wanted ordered the American Library Association to destroy all copies of the federal laws on asset forfeiture and to prevent disclosure of their content. Thanks to quick action and a lot of publicity by the ALA and others, the fascists backed off.