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Anonymous Library Cards An Option?

Ben Ostrowsky writes "On the heels of the possibility of requiring fingerprinting to use library resources, librarians don't like hoarding personally identifiable information; many are keenly aware of privacy concerns. Now it appears that anonymous library cards may be a possibility on the horizon. Tell your librarian you want to be anonymous!" From the article: " You've seen anonymous cash cards already; you may even have received them before. They're better known as gift cards. Using the same principle, libraries can issue a borrower card that uses cash, rather than personal ID information, as collateral. Here's an example: If a privacy-minded user deposits $20 to get an anonymous library card, she can check out The Terror State without identifying herself. Her account balance is temporarily reduced by $15, and when the library checks the CD back in (in good condition), her balance is restored to its original value."

369 comments

  1. Seven! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    Oh, great.

    So, now how is Brad Pitt going to find the next serial killer to terrorise him and his wife?

  2. Kind of misleading... by pthor1231 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    ..because the "resources" that they speak of in the link only talks about requiring fingerprints to access computers, similar to re-entering your password when you go to bid on something at ebay, just to make sure you are you. Unless im mistaken, you would have to have the balance of a PC on your card to use what you are being fingerprinted for, so why not just have cards that don't need to be fingerprinted, and those accounts can only use the paper resources of a library?

    1. Re:Kind of misleading... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ha, that reminds me:

      If I have physical access to your computer, I have physcial means to get your password.

    2. Re:Kind of misleading... by kfg · · Score: 1

      Unless im mistaken, you would have to have the balance of a PC. . .

      Because you are taking the PC home with you?

      KFG

    3. Re:Kind of misleading... by pthor1231 · · Score: 1

      because you might screw it up and leave it not in good working order. In any case, I'm trying to say the system is dumb.

    4. Re:Kind of misleading... by kfg · · Score: 1

      As you might go berserk and rip up an out of print book worth hundreds of dollars, and yet you don't need a library card at all to have access to it.

      Yes, the system is dumb, that is to say the proof of identity concept for mere access to library materials is dumb, not the anonymous library card idea.

      KFG

    5. Re:Kind of misleading... by IAmTheDave · · Score: 1

      Unless im mistaken, you would have to have the balance of a PC on your card to use what you are being fingerprinted for, so why not just have cards that don't need to be fingerprinted, and those accounts can only use the paper resources of a library?

      Because it's that damn slippery slope. Started out with proper borrowing rights. Then the govn't starts snooping based on what you read. Then you need a SS# to get a library card. Then you need to be fingerprinted to access information on a PC (how is that different than accessing information in a library?)

      And when people have accepted that, it's only a matter of time before they accept fingerprints for library cards, or retinal scans, or DNA scans (thinking into the future...)

      People give up their rights so slowly that they don't realize the breadth of what they've relinquished over the course of a decade.

      Thank you librarians! I'll take my anonymous card now!

      --
      Excuse my speling.
      Making The Bar Project
    6. Re:Kind of misleading... by shalla · · Score: 2, Informative

      I think we need to clarify something here. MOST libraries are very cautious about patron privacy, and every librarian I know (including myself) thinks the Naperville library is on crack for using fingerprints to use their computers. This is probably not something that Naperville would use because, well, they're insane. But most other, non-fingerprint-requiring libraries might very well be interested. I don't imagine anyone would require you to have the balance of a PC on your card. That's just silly. :)

      I certainly think the anonymous cards are a very interesting idea. My library requires ID to borrow materials because if the patron does not return the item, we need a way to contact them and bill them. If we already have the money from them in advance, then we wouldn't really care who they were.

      The only downside that immediately comes to mind for me is that sometimes people think they've returned something they have not, and the library sending them an overdue notice causes them to look for the item. Without a means to contact the patron, we'll have to replace more items (which is a pain because of the amount of processing required and the time lag where a copy of the item is unavailable or if the item is no longer available).

      In terms of using the cards to access the computers: I don't see why this would be an issue. My library specifically set up our computers so that personal identification is not required to use them. We hope to eventually have people give us their municipality to help us judge computer usage by patron bases, but that's in the future and really vague. Most libraries in the area that do require library card numbers do it as a way to 1) increase sign-ups for library cards (which generally increases funding for the library), 2) charge for printouts, 3) encourage fine-paying by blocking patrons with over a certain amount in fines until the fines are paid down, and 4) share the electronic resources fairly by limiting the number of hours a day a person may use their computers. The last generally occurs in areas where the computers are in high demand and some way of apportioning computer time fairly is needed.

      For many libraries, the anonymous cards could be used for logging in to the computers just fine. They wouldn't have fines on them since they are pre-paid, and they would presumably have an ID number on them that would be in the system and valid, just not associated with a particular person. Print charges might be automatically deducted from the card balance. The only problem would be in high-demand computer libraries where ownership of multiple cards might give a patron several hours of computer use and interfere with another patron getting even one hour. Still, some brainstorming could very well get around that obstacle.

      The card numbers would also presumeably be good for accessing library electronic databases remotely.

      There is the issue of a library's residency rules for using its collection. Some libraries I've worked in have required that a patron live in the state to have a free card because otherwise they're paying no taxes towards the upkeep of the library. However, those libraries simply charged a fee to issue out-of-state library cards. I assume an annual or bi-annual fee for the anonymous cards would solve that problem.

      Sorry for the thinking-as-I-type approach to this post. It's just a flatout good idea...

    7. Re:Kind of misleading... by bhtooefr · · Score: 1

      My old local library (I've since moved) uses library card numbers to restrict access to those that have internet privileges - to keep minors without parental permission from getting online, mainly. The cards that have permission have a sticker that says "NET" (with quotation marks...), and logins to the system with them will work.

    8. Re:Kind of misleading... by tmtresh · · Score: 1

      The only downside that immediately comes to mind for me is that sometimes people think they've returned something they have not, and the library sending them an overdue notice causes them to look for the item.

      This problem could be eliminated if, in order to have funds returned to your card, you have to present both card and book, instead of the common dropbox. Of course, that requires more time and standing in line.

  3. It can't work by SamBeckett · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Because A) Not everyone who uses a library frequently has the $$$ to plop down on a book, even temporarily. One of the benefits of libraries is that the books are for everyone and not just us rich snobs who go to barnes and nobles every day. B) Sane people will not appreciate the library holding their dough unless they credit a decent amount of interest. Sure, it's only for a few weeks, but that money can add up fast (see: Office Space, Superman, etc).

    1. Re:It can't work by Goronmon · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Yeah, having to throw down $20 or so for every book I take out would just cut into the budget too much. However, I wouldn't mind seeing this as just an option to other ways to take books from a library.

    2. Re:It can't work by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Only the rich can afford privacy. Surely you know this already.

    3. Re:It can't work by pthor1231 · · Score: 0

      Only the rich can afford privacy says the AC....you must have money!!! Mob him!!

    4. Re:It can't work by bobbis.u · · Score: 4, Insightful
      Why is this modded up?

      What do you expect libraries to do? Give out a load of books to anonymous people with no collateral. That is basically saying anyone can come in and steal whatever books they want.

      Anyone that cannot afford the $20 can still go in the library and read the book.

      And what bank are you with that the interest on $20 for a few weeks is actually an appreciable amount?

    5. Re:It can't work by pla · · Score: 1

      Not everyone who uses a library frequently has the $$$ to plop down on a book, even temporarily.

      No one suggested using this system exclusively. Can't afford a $100-or-so deposit? Give your name!

      Or, just read the book in the library. AFAIK, that still works just fine, even with the current otherwise-not-anonymous system.

    6. Re:It can't work by antifoidulus · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Also, libraries do not like to be treated as book stores. A lot of them have problems with people checking out books and then deciding that they like them and keeping them and deciding to pay the library for the book. A lot of libraries have been charging processing fees to replace missing books in order to deter this practice.
      Remember, a majority of the people who work there are volunteers, they don't need to constantly be worrying about how to re-stock a book someone borrow-purchased. THe scheme in TFA would make a perfect book rental store(with a few dollar rental fee) but it sounds like the scheme somebody who is only thinking of themselves and not hte library.

    7. Re:It can't work by pthor1231 · · Score: 1

      What if you want to check out say ten books. Hey, thats like 200 bucks right there. Even if the interest isn't that much for you, imagine how much money the library would make from that. Would be almost like a small mutual fund. And no, he doesn't expect the library to give books out to anon people, he expects the system to either A) not change because its not feasible (like his post title says) or B) have users printed.

    8. Re:It can't work by Goronmon · · Score: 1

      What do you expect libraries to do? Give out a load of books to anonymous people with no collateral. That is basically saying anyone can come in and steal whatever books they want.

      I think the point is that this system has too many downsides to replace any current system for checking out books. No one is saying you shouldn't have to have collateral, but having to throw down cash for every book you checkout just seems to be taking it a bit far for me.

    9. Re:It can't work by pintomp3 · · Score: 1, Insightful

      A)I doubt this creates a huge wall between the haves and the have-nots. As long as the amount is low enough, this shouldn't be a problem. It's not a huge premium for something that is optional. B) I'm not sure how many people will worry about the interest. $5 over a couple weeks? Given the number of people who have checking accounts that don't bear interest, I would say it's a non-issue.

    10. Re:It can't work by CastrTroy · · Score: 1

      Did you even read the summary? it's like $5 per book. Which is actually pretty good. Have you ever lost a library book before? Most charge way more than $5.

      --

      Anthropic principle: We see the universe the way it is because if it were different we would not be here to see it.
    11. Re:It can't work by heli0 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      You do not need to be a rich snob to purchase books. Look who the largest percentage of smokers are, people in the lowest quartile of income. If 38% of the people in that income quartile can afford $8/day for fags they can certainly afford books as well. They simply choose to fund their drug addiction instead.

      http://www.phac-aspc.gc.ca/ccdpc-cpcmc/cancer/publ ications/nphs-sboc/nphs16_e.html

      Of course you still can argue which is the cause and which the effect. Do they make this senseless choice because they are poor and uneducated or are they poor and uneducated because of this type of choice...

      "Sane people will not appreciate the library holding their dough unless they credit a decent amount of interest."

      If they have $50 for an entire month how much interest have you lost? At 4% APR it is a whopping $0.16. I don't think "sane people" spend much time worrying about $0.16.

      --
      Whenever the offence inspires less horror than the punishment, the rigour of penal law is obliged to give way...
    12. Re:It can't work by pthor1231 · · Score: 1

      Umm, yeah, I did read the summary, article, and parent posts. I don't remember seeing 5 bucks anywhere, but I did see fifteen and twenty dollars mentioned, but it may just be too early and I haven't had coffee yet. Yea, even if it was five bucks, thats less than the amount the library would charge you if you lost the book, but thats not the point. The point is whether or not the system would be feasible, and why.

    13. Re:It can't work by Kainaw · · Score: 4, Informative

      Not everyone who uses a library frequently has the $$$ to plop down on a book

      This isn't a matter of just not having the money - you'd think that the geeks on /. would be able to take a couple minutes out of their day to search for library history on Google. Originally, libraries were private. Then, many went 'public', but charged a membership fee. After many years of fighting for equal rights, the membership fees were abolished so that even the poorest Americans would be allowed to use the resources at the public library.

      I know the idiotic /. solution is that the poor people who can't afford to plop down cash can just get an old card - one that isn't anonymous. Toss equal rights right out the window. The rich get to be anonymous. The poor get tracked.

      Isn't there some old phrase about learning your history so it doesn't repeat itself?

      --
      The previous comment is purposely vague and generalized, but all of the facts are completely true.
    14. Re:It can't work by Skye16 · · Score: 1

      You put 20$ on your account. You check out the book. You now have 15$ left on your account, allowing you to check out 3 more books. If you bring the first one back, you're back up to 20$. We'l just chalk this one up to lack of coffee :]

    15. Re:It can't work by Skye16 · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      Sigh. We'l => We'll

    16. Re:It can't work by Goronmon · · Score: 0

      Her account balance is temporarily reduced by $15

      Umm...I think you read tha article wrong :p

    17. Re:It can't work by PhilipMckrack · · Score: 1

      If that's the case you could expand your library quite nicely for $5 a book. There is no way a library would anonymously give out a book with less collateral than it is worth. They would turn into a bookstore.

    18. Re:It can't work by Jane_Dozey · · Score: 1

      I don't think they were going to make it the only option. It's just a method they could use *if* a person wants to take a book out anonymously. You could probably have a regular old library card aswell for when you're not trying to read something that you don't want your name linked to.

      --
      Silly rabbit
    19. Re:It can't work by Skye16 · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      I, too, have not yet had my coffee.

      /flee

    20. Re:It can't work by putaro · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Actually, it's worse.

      Most people won't/can't be bothered to get an anonymous library card. So, either they will be phased out, or possesion of one would be considered evidence that you're up to no good. Or, more likely, rules protecting privacy will be phased out with the excuse "well, you can get an anonymous card if you like" - but of course, no one really does.

    21. Re:It can't work by VikingDBA · · Score: 1

      I really wouldn't mind my public library making intrest off my $20. I am sure I pay more than that to them in taxes each year.

    22. Re:It can't work by 1u3hr · · Score: 1
      Because A) Not everyone who uses a library frequently has the $$$

      If you'd rtfa, you would notice that this was suggested as an ALTERNATIVE to ID-style library cards; useful for visitors as well as tin-foil-hat wearers. Most users would probably stick with the free ID-based cards.

    23. Re:It can't work by Smidge204 · · Score: 1

      You would have to be EXCEPTIONALLY poor to not afford a $20 refundable deposit. And you can always sit in the library and read/listen/watch (at least in most places) and pay nothing.

      If $20 makes the difference between whether you get a book or food for a few days, you probably have bigger problems to tackle and not terribly interested in libraries. I just can't see anyone with even the most menial below-minimum-wage job and a place to sleep that doesn't have "SEARS" on the side not being able to scrape up $20 for a few days.
      =Smidge=

    24. Re:It can't work by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Agreed. Heck, I can lose $20 just by leaving a bill on a counter somewhere and forgetting to pick it up. This is by no means because I'm rich, either--quite the contrary. I'm a starving college student, and I really could have used that $20, but it's gone forever. But it wasn't the end of the world. An anonymous library card still gives you the option of getting the $20 back, and you could probably even imagine some sort of low income subsidies for people who could demonstrate financial need--the subsidy organization would pay for your anonymous card, and in turn you could go rip off the book, if you were feeling like a jerk. Yeah, I'm not sure how practical it would be, but they could hold your information if it were that important, and at least they'd be legally allowed to hold off the Feds.

    25. Re:It can't work by joshdick · · Score: 1

      That first point is spot on.

      The people who need libraries the most, the poor, will benefit the least from this proposal.

      Besides, the idea of tying money into this equation is fundamentally flawed. Privacy should cost nothing.

    26. Re:It can't work by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      After many years of fighting for equal rights, the membership fees were abolished so that even the poorest Americans would be allowed to use the resources at the public library.

      I'm certainly in favor of not having fees, but how the hell is that "equal rights"? Equal to what?

    27. Re:It can't work by saider · · Score: 1

      It is a deposit. If you need your money, just request your deposit back when you are done with your books. You won't be able to borrow books until you put down another deposit, but at least you can now buy dinner.

      Interest on the deposit is unlikely to be enough to buy a cheeseburger once a year. So this aspect of the argument is just plain silly.

      I remember being a starving student and somehow I managed to come up with 20-30 each week for "recreational activities". Bitching because you can't set aside a small deposit (I'd guess that 50-100 would be typical) is arguing for arguments sake.

      --


      Remember, You are unique...just like everyone else.
    28. Re:It can't work by calambrac · · Score: 1
      From what I gather, this would be optional. It provides a way to be anonymous. If you like the current system, and you don't want to be anonymous, things work just as they do now, no collateral required.

      This is an example of libraries trying to help people in the face of the PATRIOT act, and you're bitching about interest payments. I think your priorities are a little screwed up.

    29. Re:It can't work by willdenniss · · Score: 1

      Apart from anything, since when have people complained when libraries get more money?

      The amount of collective interest would be a fair bit if there were enough users, but this is great! The library can get more books.

      There is certainly a case to be made against people making profit out of deposits, but in the case of a library, really who cares?

      Will.

    30. Re:It can't work by JimBobJoe · · Score: 1
      I know the idiotic /. solution is that the poor people who can't afford to plop down cash can just get an old card - one that isn't anonymous. Toss equal rights right out the window. The rich get to be anonymous. The poor get tracked.

      That's not an insignificant issue. Of course, not a damn person here has mentioned that the poor are also the least likely people to have and ID card in the first place. There are lots of states in which an ID card is $20 and over.

      On a side note, my Ohio has a law (4507.52) that states:

      No agent of the state or its political subdivisions shall condition the granting of any benefit, service, right, or privilege upon the possession by any person of an identification card. Nothing in this section shall preclude any publicly operated or franchised transit system from using an identification card for the purpose of granting benefits or services of the system.

      No person shall be required to apply for, carry, or possess an identification card.

      A strict reading of this law implies that no person would be required to have or show an ID card in order to get a library card (and on that note, I did indeed get one of my library cards without showing my driver's license, though I showed other documents which credentialed my identity in some way.)

      In any case, the more time passes, the more we come up with processes, workflows, technologies and procedures that make it less necessary to have an ID card, not more. I'm willing to defend the concept of anonymous, collateral based library cards...perhaps in time we'll come up with a better solution that doesn't require collateral.
    31. Re:It can't work by lav-chan · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I'm not going to take sides on this arguement, and i didn't read the actual article, but the summary does not say $5.

      Here's an example: If a privacy-minded user deposits $20 to get an anonymous library card, she can check out The Terror State without identifying herself. Her account balance is temporarily reduced by $15, and when the library checks the CD back in (in good condition), her balance is restored to its original value.

      That means it costs $15 and you have $5 left in the account.

    32. Re:It can't work by Trillan · · Score: 1

      And C) Libraries have out of print books. Foundation and Earth by Isaac Asimov (the chronological end of the Foundation series) was out of print for years following his death. For some reason, hard cover supplies ran out and a paperback form was not introduced for several years -- the two prequels (written later) were available in paperback long before it. I think it went back into print a few years ago.

      I lusted for this book for most of my teenage years (yes, I was warped). Were I the rational, self-maximizing type that economists assume (and a lot of people actually are), I'd have plopped down $25 or whatever, "borrowed" the book, and thrown the library card in the trash on my way out.

      This scheme assumes a book's value is the same to the library and the borrower, or at least that the book's value to the borrower can be predicted by the library. This is often not true. I'd have paid an awful lot to complete my Foundation set.

    33. Re:It can't work by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, your right. I think it would be a much better plan if I could just anonymously walk out of a library with an arm full of books that I have no incentive to return EVER.

      Okay, maybe that wouldn't be such a great idea.

      You seem to have forgot to tell all of us your better idea for anonymity.

    34. Re:It can't work by robertjw · · Score: 1

      Not only that, but C) how long before your local library becomes like Blockbuster, requiring a credit card to check out a book, charging you ridiculous late fees when appropriate, calling you and asking where their books are. I just don't think this is a path we want to start down with the public library system. Fingerprints may be a little ridiculous, but getting money involved in the system doesn't seem like a good way around it.

    35. Re:It can't work by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "If they have $50 for an entire month how much interest have you lost? At 4% APR it is a whopping $0.16. I don't think "sane people" spend much time worrying about $0.16."

      But imagine billions and billions of months, then it begins to add up.

    36. Re:It can't work by DavidTC · · Score: 1
      In fact, nothing says you can't do both. Check out most books using your normal card, and check out 'dangerous' books using your anonymous card.

      And I'd make this system disposible. Forget 'cards'. Let people walk up, give them X dollars and get a book, print up a receipt with the amount and a code on it, and let them walk back in with the receipt once the book is in and exchange it for money.

      Think of it as a new card issued for each book. If you want, you can do this with 'temp cards', where the receipts look like library cards...but it should be one per book, and you should have to turn them back in to get your money back. (To be reset and reused.)

      This disallows any sort of anonymous tracking. Otherwise, you could track the account as stuff went in and out, even if you didn't know who it was.

      And to make it more secure, once you turn back in a book, all your record should say is 'This receipt now has a balance of X dollars', with no indication of what book used to be checked out.

      I'd say let them use the book by itself, but then you'd have to return it in person and stand there while they check it in.

      This way, to track you, they'd have to subvert the system prior to you turning the book back in, to learn what account it goes with, and then stand around in the library monitoring the system waiting for you to show up in person and recover your cash.

      --
      If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
    37. Re:It can't work by owlstead · · Score: 1

      Smoking is probably not a great idea if you are poor. Then again, most people smoke to get rid of stress, or when idling. This is probably more common with poor people than with rich people. The choice of drugs is also important; rich people tend to use different (much more expensive) drugs. Even if this was not the case, you are still generalizing poor people. A lot of poor people spend their money wisely.

      The point that the author was trying to make is that the library, and the hiring of books should be low-entrance. Your argument does not change that rather valid point. Obviously, the idea that you can go to the library to read the book *does* make a difference.

    38. Re:It can't work by IAmTheDave · · Score: 1

      It's just a method they could use *if* a person wants to take a book out anonymously.

      Just make sure that there is no CC camera watching you borrow that book...

      --
      Excuse my speling.
      Making The Bar Project
    39. Re:It can't work by DavidTC · · Score: 1
      Well, no one is saying they have to charge the price of a book. Just like now, they can charge what it costs to replace the book, which is not the bookstore price at all, but a few dollars more.

      OTOH, does anyone find it sad that there are so many people who do not have easy access to bookstores? I am one of these people...the nearest real bookstore is 40 miles away. I think maybe libraries should start offering bookstore services.

      You want to buy a book on the shelf? Give us X dollars and we'll order another copy for you. Understand it will come in with the next shipment of books, which could take a month or so, and you'll have to pay in advance. And understand you'll have to come in and present your card and ask for it.

      --
      If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
    40. Re:It can't work by DavidTC · · Score: 1
      No it doesn't, for the simple matter that libraries have never charged the 'price' for a book, but the cost of the book to replace.

      I can't imagine why they'd suddenly start loaning based on the price.

      --
      If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
    41. Re:It can't work by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Besides, the idea of tying money into this equation is fundamentally flawed. Privacy should cost nothing.

      Fine. If you want to read a book anonymously without paying anything to the library, then read it in the library, instead of borrowing it. Problem solved.

    42. Re:It can't work by shalla · · Score: 1

      Remember, a majority of the people who work there are volunteers, they don't need to constantly be worrying about how to re-stock a book someone borrow-purchased.

      This is a common misconception, but most libraries are really run by staff and most people you see there are paid. There are a few libraries that are volunteer-run, but they tend to be tiny, poorly funded ones.

      Librarians generally have a Masters in library science, and even the people who simply check the books in and out (library clerks) are paid. You'd have to be to take the amount of crap the public can dish out. ;)

      That said, it's a good point that restocking is a pain in the ass. It is. Every time a patron loses a book in one of my areas, I have to decide if it's worth replacing or if I should get another book instead, and then I have to find a place to get said book (or CD, or DVD. Old magazine issues are a nightmare.). Keep in mind that since this is the public's money I'm using, I have to document every purchase in certain standard ways, so I can't just order things from anywhere without having an agreement set-up or filling out special forms.

      Anyways... I order it, it gets delivered, it's catalogued (because if it has a different ISBN, you can't use the same catalog record), it has all the security and location items added to it, it's covered, and finally it's put out for use. The whole process can take over a month, and if a lot of items are coming in at once, it can take multiple months. The processing fee does double-duty: it helps deter patrons from keeping books, and it helps pay some of the cost of the time spent readying a new copy.

      Like many professions, I have trouble fitting in all my job duties as it is, and I often do work at home. I don't see a need for the library as a bookstore in most places when folks can order from Amazon.com or go to a local store. Order from them and while you're waiting, check the book out of the library to start reading.

    43. Re:It can't work by arminw · · Score: 1

      .... but having to throw down cash for every book you checkout just seems to be taking it a bit far for me....

      Indeed true. There are always people that need to fix things that are NOT broken. There have been public libraries almost since the printing press was invented that have worked and are still doing fine. Of course, now that we have computer sytems that can track people and their activities, we have to fill up all those empty data storage systems and give the dumb bureaucrats some data to look at. This of course will be implemented as an "anti-terrorism" measure and it will make us all so very much more secure!

      --
      All theory is gray
    44. Re:It can't work by NoizeyMike · · Score: 1

      There an appropriate quote that describes this behavior though I can't remember where it is from. I think it might be Sin City.

      "A smoker is always a smoker when there chips are down"

      Are you a smoker? I was. The prior quote is rather retardedly true (from my perspective). Karl Jung among other psychologists observed and was curious with how people who were in bad situations had a tendecy to make their lives worse (wonderfully paradoxical aspect of human behavior). I think it answers your cause and effect query in a sense (though it doesn't explain why humans do that). Anyway good observation, not sure why this post is relevant, though... if you haven't been a smoker you'll have a tough time trying to understand the insanity of walking to a store to spend the last bit of money you have on something to you know you don't want.

      Err.. anyway... :),
      Mike

    45. Re:It can't work by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A lot of libraries have been charging processing fees to replace missing books in order to deter this practice.

      Which library doesn't do this? Here in Canada, every public library I know of charges hefty replacement fees, and they should.

      Remember, a majority of the people who work there are volunteers

      Really?? Again, which public library does this? Here in Canada, they keep volunteers away from the library itself. You're dealing with people's privacy and by the time you invest in the background-check and training of volunteers, you might as well pay them so they stay with you for some time. Library volunteers are good for fundraising (running the bookstore, public events, etc.), but not for running the core of the business.

    46. Re:It can't work by Frank+T.+Lofaro+Jr. · · Score: 1

      You planning on living billions and billions of months?

      If so, let me know your secret.

      --
      Just because it CAN be done, doesn't mean it should!
    47. Re:It can't work by Trillan · · Score: 1

      In my comment, I never once mentioned price. In fact, I specifically said value. The problem is the value of the book is subjective: The value to the library is the cost of replacing it, including effort (if they calculate replacement cost correctly). The value to me may be much lower or much higher.

      If the value of the book is less valuable to the borrower than the collateral, there's no problem. The borrower will return the book.

      If the value of the book is more valuable to the borrower than the collateral, a rational (in the strictest economic sense) person will not return the book.

      Now, in a traditional system, the collateral includes one's reputation. In an anonymous, cash-only collateral system, the collateral does not include one's reputation, but only the cash that is associated with the card.

      Whether people not returning books is a problem or not is up to the library, I suppose. I mean, you could argue that if they took into account the full cost of replacing the book it isn't a problem. But I think that's at least a somewhat silly argument.

      I hope that's clearer. I think it's the same thing I said before, but hopefully phrased better.

    48. Re:It can't work by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This idea also would help fund libraries by allowing them to earn interest on the 'float'.

    49. Re:It can't work by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You have noticed the new cameras, yes?

    50. Re:It can't work by shmlco · · Score: 1

      With all that, why not order from Amazon, save 30%, and have it next week (free shipping)?

      --
      Any sect, cult, or religion will legislate its creed into law if it acquires the political power to do so.
    51. Re:It can't work by babyrat · · Score: 1

      If they have $50 for an entire month how much interest have you lost? At 4% APR it is a whopping $0.16. I don't think "sane people" spend much time worrying about $0.16.

      Yeah, but if you are talking about a year that's $1.92. And then if you consider the power of compound interest, in only 10 years you could save enough to actually buy a book!! Well, a cheap book, at todays prices...but still a book!

    52. Re:It can't work by Leeesher · · Score: 1

      The reason libraries charge processing fees isn't to deter people from treating a library like a bookstore - it's because processing books costs money. The plastic covering on books costs 1$ per sheet, label tape is 25$/roll, the record must be re-entered. . . . .

    53. Re:It can't work by hotdiggitydawg · · Score: 0

      Wow! They should save money by plonking down $20 to "borrow" a Leon Uris novel, then use the pages to roll their own...

      And the best part is, with anonymous library cards, nobody would be the wiser!

    54. Re:It can't work by Ph33r+th3+g(O)at · · Score: 1

      The secret

      --
      I too have felt the cold finger of injustice.
    55. Re:It can't work by dasunt · · Score: 1

      I've been poor before, and there were times when I didn't have $20 in the bank.

      That being said, $20 is a trivial amount in the US today. Its accessable by a donation of plasma, walking roads for recyclable cans, etc. If I valued my anonymity and this scheme was around during one of my "poor" periods, I could scrape up $20. It may take a month or two (yes, $20 is a trivial amount, but a $20 expense can break a budget, especially if there are existing debts), but I could have done it.

      Does this burden the poor more? Of course. Yet the poor will also have to take time to read the book, which is a loss of potential money. Self-education takes a commitment of time, there is no way of changing that save for future SF-ish advances.

      Speaking of poverty, I grew up with 5 siblings in some pretty dire straits. Due to a parental commitment to good education and hard work ethics, as well as post-secondary education options in high-school, all of my siblings are either in the middle class, or going to be in the middle class. (My little-sister just graduated with a double major and honors -- and she had her student loans paid off before her graduation date!). We all were heavy users of the public library.

      Being poor sucks in horrible, horrible ways. But the US is one of the better countries in the world to be poor in. If you are willing to work, are willing/ able to learn, and of sound health/body, odds are you will do well. (Please bear in mind that I'm not talking about services for the elderly and disable -- that's outside the scope of this already tangental post).

    56. Re:It can't work by Mr.+Slippery · · Score: 1
      With all that, why not order from Amazon, save 30%, and have it next week (free shipping)?

      Online bookstores are fine (Amazon is evil, shop Powell's instead) if you know the specific book you want.

      To pick up books and flip through to compare them, or to just go browsing for interesting unknown books, you need a bookstore.

      --
      Tom Swiss | the infamous tms | my blog
      You cannot wash away blood with blood
    57. Re:It can't work by stlhawkeye · · Score: 1
      I know the idiotic /. solution is that the poor people who can't afford to plop down cash can just get an old card - one that isn't anonymous. Toss equal rights right out the window. The rich get to be anonymous. The poor get tracked.

      If people who can afford $50-$100 collateral for books are "rich" then I'm a goddam billionaire. Do you really think that only the rich can afford to do this? That only people in the top 2% or top 5% of taxpayers can afford this?

      --
      "I have never won a debate with an ignorant person." -Ali ibn Abi Talib
    58. Re:It can't work by stlhawkeye · · Score: 1
      Privacy should cost nothing.

      What you mean is, "Privacy should cost me nothing." Who cares if other people have to pay for it. Because allowing ANYBODY to just walk into a library and take a book out without having to identify themselves is going to fairly quickly result in libraries depleted of books and tons of library books on eBay and in used book stores. That's not "free".

      --
      "I have never won a debate with an ignorant person." -Ali ibn Abi Talib
    59. Re:It can't work by Kadin2048 · · Score: 1

      So don't take out quite as many books, if you don't have that much collateral, AND you don't want to give your identity.

      It's a tradeoff: you can either be anonymous and put up cash in order to be allowed to take books out of the building, or you can give up your identity and other personal information and save the money. It's an issue of how much you think your privacy is worth.

      Personally I think this sounds like a really good plan, especially as it would allow people to get checkout access to libraries that they currently can't, because of residency restrictions. For example, if I go visit a friend for a few weeks this summer in another state, and want to take some books out from the library, I either have to borrow my friend's card, or apply for a new one with their address (which could be a problem as I can't prove residency at the address, if the library wants to be strict about it). With a system like this, I could put up some cash and take out whatever I want. The library wouldn't have to care or question where I'm from, because they're covered if I take the books and never come back.

      --
      "Ladies and gentlemen, my killbot features Lotus Notes and a machine gun. It is the finest available."
    60. Re:It can't work by yali · · Score: 1
      The book Freakonomics has a great example of something like this. A day care center was having trouble with people showing up late to get their kids, which requires day care workers to stay overtime. So they started charging a fine when parents came late. The only problem was, parents started coming late even more than they used to. Previously they had felt some guilt about making the workers stay late. Now the parents treated it as an economic transaction rather than a social obligation, and they figured it was worth paying the fine in order to have some extra flexibility.

      Admittedly, libraries do charge fines sometimes, but in most ways they are set up to be perceived as a social/community institution rather than economic ones. The anonymous cash card system would have to be implemented very carefully to avoid tipping the balance.

    61. Re:It can't work by RenoRelife · · Score: 1

      Oh, Screw the interest. I think I've found a new bank.

    62. Re:It can't work by Kadin2048 · · Score: 1

      I think you're exaggerating. First, you only need to put up money if you want to take the book out of the library. So you can always read it there. Second, you only need to take it out if you want to be anonymous--you could take it out as normal with your name/address. And third, you'd have to be so poor as to not be able to afford the collateral on a single book.

      I think the number of people who would meet all three criteria would be remarkably small.

      And if it really did become an issue, maybe we could come up with some sort of semi-anonymous escrow system, where for your personal information and some small fee, a third party puts up the collateral for the book: kind of like a bail bondsman does if you're in jail and can't make bail.

      --
      "Ladies and gentlemen, my killbot features Lotus Notes and a machine gun. It is the finest available."
    63. Re:It can't work by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Funny you should mention books versus cigarettes; George Orwell wrote an essay on exactly that.

    64. Re:It can't work by RWerp · · Score: 1

      Some books cost much more than $20.

      --
      "Long run is a misleading guide to current affairs. In the long run we are all dead." (John Maynard Keynes)
    65. Re:It can't work by RWerp · · Score: 1

      Everything costs something to somebody

      --
      "Long run is a misleading guide to current affairs. In the long run we are all dead." (John Maynard Keynes)
    66. Re:It can't work by d34thm0nk3y · · Score: 1

      What I don't understand is how this is supposed to be anonymous. So instead of having your fingerprint they now have you bank info?!

    67. Re:It can't work by Java+Ape · · Score: 1

      I agree! I am tired of people who consider the library a "try-it-before-you-buy-it" bookstore. I am a fan of an author who became popular rather quickly, and many of her earlier books were difficult to find, and sold for very high prices on the collector's market. I ponied up the money for an expensive copy on ebay, and sure enough, it came with a library stamp. This is becoming a common practice -- whenever a books collectible value exceeds it's original purchase price, some pinhead checks out all the copies they can get, sells them on ebay, then claims to have "lost" the book. Bottom line, they profit, and great books are PERMENANTLY removed from the public eye. Grump.

    68. Re:It can't work by magefile · · Score: 1

      Temporarily - then it gets put back (I didn't RTFA either, but that's what it says). And the *smart* way to do it would be to have a regular library card so you could explain why you were seen there at that time. Then, you'd check out everything non-suspi ... damn it, I'm wasting too much time with this crap.

    69. Re:It can't work by shmlco · · Score: 1
      Or a library, as indicated by the OP. Or you can order interesting books from Amazon, check 'em out, and return them with no hassle.

      And Amazon is just another retailer. But either way, I'd rather order from them that wait a month for a library to get in a shipment...

      --
      Any sect, cult, or religion will legislate its creed into law if it acquires the political power to do so.
    70. Re:It can't work by bbtom · · Score: 1

      Exactly. Here in Britain, the new ID card system is going to be around £80-£90 ($140-$160 US). Of course, it's an optional card. You don't have to have it if you don't work, drive a car, need to go to the hospital, travel on public transport, claim benefits or don't have the misfortune of running in to a police officer in the street who wants to see your 'papers'.

      --
      catch (HumourFailureException e) { e.user.send("You, sir, are a humourless idiot."); }
    71. Re:It can't work by Goronmon · · Score: 1

      Overrated? Interesting...

  4. Who will pay for this? by PortWineBoy · · Score: 5, Insightful
    I'm sure our underfunded libraries and overworked librarians will find this system easy to implement.

    These fingerprint scans for PC use are a stupid idea implemented by some town in Ill. I've never heard of. I'm sure that program won't fly...

    Let's stop creating solutions for problems that don't exist. We have enough real problems in the US that need solutions...

    --

    this sig deleted by another sig

    1. Re:Who will pay for this? by Scrameustache · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I'm sure our underfunded libraries and overworked librarians will find this system easy to implement.
      These fingerprint scans for PC use are a stupid idea implemented by some town in Ill. I've never heard of. I'm sure that program won't fly...


      I would LOVE this thing if it were implemented. I could go to public libraries when travelling! I could borrow a book I really need for my schoolwork when I forgot my regular library card, etc.

      This is a great idea, not only for privacy, but for convenience. You get to use the ressource without the hassle, and it doesn't cost you a fortune, you loan them money, they loan you a book, you exchange it back when you are done. Everyone's happy!

      Let's stop creating solutions for problems that don't exist. We have enough real problems in the US that need solutions...

      Why don't you go work on solving them instead of posting on slashdot then?
      Don't know where to start? Go volunteer to help out your local "overworked librarian", I'm sure they'll appreciate it.

      --

      You can't take the sky from me...

    2. Re:Who will pay for this? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


      These fingerprint scans for PC use are a stupid idea implemented by some town in Ill. I've never heard of. I'm sure that program won't fly...
      Hey! I'm from Naperville, you insensitive clod!

    3. Re:Who will pay for this? by PortWineBoy · · Score: 1
      And may I ask, how do you know that I don't contribute to Wiki? Because as a matter of fact I do.

      I also volunteer my time and money with organizations I find worthy.

      Why don't you stop making assumptions (because you know what they say about assumptions) and take a reality check. This system might benefit you, and I'm happy for you on that point.

      --

      this sig deleted by another sig

    4. Re:Who will pay for this? by vaxer · · Score: 1

      Actually, it'll be fairly easy to implement in the software, since upcoming releases of library management software will support this.

      If a library already has cash cards for their copiers and/or printers, it's even easier to do this.

      Ben Ostrowsky

    5. Re:Who will pay for this? by garcia · · Score: 0, Troll

      This is a great idea, not only for privacy, but for convenience. You get to use the ressource without the hassle, and it doesn't cost you a fortune, you loan them money, they loan you a book, you exchange it back when you are done. Everyone's happy!

      Privacy? There is no privacy here. It's a violation of privacy when you have to give up your personal identity for convenience . There is absolutely no excuse for that and you (and people like you) are exactly the reason why identity theives and the government are winning.

    6. Re:Who will pay for this? by DrEldarion · · Score: 1

      by some town in Ill. I've never heard of. I'm sure that program won't fly...

      You don't know much about IL, then, do you?

      They're doing it in NAPERVILLE, a well-off suburb of Chicago with nearly 150,000 people, its own private college (which has a KILLER track team), a huge stadium where the Chicago soccer team has its games, and which was rated in 2003 as the best place in the midwest to live. This isn't some town in the middle of nowhere with no money, and I have absolutely no doubt that it will be implemented there.

    7. Re:Who will pay for this? by djmurdoch · · Score: 0

      Privacy? There is no privacy here.

      Looks like you didn't even read the summary, let alone the article.

    8. Re:Who will pay for this? by Thunderstruck · · Score: 4, Insightful

      This is actually a solution to underfunded libraries. The way the system works, I plop down my $20 deposit for an anonymous library card. So do 5,000 other people. Thats 100,000 sitting in the bank, collecting interest, and giving the library several thousand bucks extra every year.

      This is much like the IOLTA system most lawyers keep. Whenever they accept money on behalf of a client, it must go into a special account. At the end of each year, the interest generated goes to fund public legal services.

      Applied to libraries, nobody knows what I read, and the library gets extra funding. What's not to love?

      --
      Trying to use sarcasm in text-based forums does not work.
    9. Re:Who will pay for this? by garcia · · Score: 1

      I was kidding. But I don't expect you to understand that.

    10. Re:Who will pay for this? by Deliveranc3 · · Score: 1

      No they won't they're unionized and you can't volunteer.

      It sooks!

    11. Re:Who will pay for this? by Surt · · Score: 1

      This is a fairly trivial program to implement given the technology already available in most libraries. Most libraries have cards, associated with accounts, which have a balance due on overdue books. Most if not all of the books in the libraries system have a known (and encoded) price.

      So now all you have to do is make sure that your system allows for a positive balance, and train the checkout desk personnel to subtract book value at checkout time for anonymous accounts, and to make sure balances stay positive on such accounts.

      In addition, such a program pays for itself if even a relatively small number of people use it: you get to keep their cash balance in an interest bearing account.

      --
      "Who is the Journal of Quantum Physics going to believe?" --Stephen Hawking
    12. Re:Who will pay for this? by Boronx · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Cities will just say: You made ten thousand dollars on interest last year, so you won't mind if we cut next years budget by ten thousand.

    13. Re:Who will pay for this? by Suppafly · · Score: 1

      No they won't they're unionized and you can't volunteer.

      Just curious, but have you ever tried to volunteer at a library? I'm not sure that being unionized would keep them from allowing volunteers but I haven't really ever looked into it.

    14. Re:Who will pay for this? by Faux_Pseudo · · Score: 1

      The way the system works, I plop down my $20 deposit for an anonymous library card. So do 5,000 other people. Thats 100,000 sitting in the bank, collecting interest, and giving the library several thousand bucks extra every year.
      and if you think that their funding won't be cut by the same amount they take in then you have never lived in a state the year after it starts a weekly lotery game and promisses that \$$x will go to the underfunded schools.

    15. Re:Who will pay for this? by Ykant · · Score: 1
      rated in 2003 as the best place in the midwest to live...
      If you're married with 1.36 kids, nonspecifically Caucasian, and make six figures, and you live in a town full of people with the same demographic to boot, how bad could such a town be?

      I'd also like to mention that the Naperville area is apparently home to some of the most well-polished "non-nude" models on the 'Net.

      (At least, that's what I've heard)

      --
      Spelling, grammar, punctuation? We need something that checks logic.
    16. Re:Who will pay for this? by makohund · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I don't think this will ever fly, either. There is a lot of time/money invested in cataloging library materials... they can't afford books walking out the door with no accountability. Which I can GUARANTEE would happen in spades.

      A deposit to cover the cost of the book isn't enough. Even a hefty processing fee wouldn't cover it. It's not just money, either... the library has chosen the item for a reason, and wishes it to be available to the public. When an item is lost&paid, it isn't available until it can be re-ordered/re-added, which takes time... enough of this takes place already (via both legitimate claims AND white lies) without helping it along with a "hey, it's like a bookstore!" option.

      See, I work for a library (sysadmin) and I can tell you straight up that librarians don't actually give a crap about fines, fees, and replacement charges.

      They just want their stuff back, so other people can use it. It's what we're here for, right? Fines are nothing more than a necessary incentive to bring stuff back when you are supposed to. So other people can use it. Without them, people wouldn't. Sometimes they don't anyway. Many libraries hold "amnesty weeks" on a regular basis to encourage people just to give us back the stuff, and we'll forget about the whole thing. Replacement charges are there to accomodate legitimate cases of patrons losing material, allowing them to make it right.

      Amazingly enough, There are those that just take stuff and pay the charges anyway.

      It's tough enough already to keep stuff from being stolen. Add an anonymous aspect to the "I can just pay for this item instead of return it" attitude... my goodness! How on earth would we keep half of the stuff from walking out the door for good?

      Besides, this is a solution to a non-problem. Librarians are ingrained with the traditions of "freedom to read", and protecting patrons right to privacy in that regard. You think you hate the Patriot Act? Most librarians spit venom at any mention of it. (Not out on the floor with the public of course.)

      I've sat in seminars with over a thousand of my peers (at vendor sponsored conferences, no less) where honoring those traditions and preserving patron privacy in the face of Patriot Act was the topic of the day. Presentations were given by libraries and organizations that fought it from the get-go. Not sure why I tell you this, other than perhaps hoping it inspires some kind of confidence.

      If you are truly concerned about privacy, and how your library handles it, ask the librarians. They'll probably be happy to help you. They may even refer you to the director, invite you to a library board meeting, or put you in contact with a sysadmin that might be happy to chat. (Yeah, we're busy. But some stuff is important, and public perception of privacy is a biggie on that list.)

      Have you discovered your library has no privacy policy, or a lousy policy? Ask about getting it changed. Talk to the Director. No luck? Go straight to the library board and hit them up with it. Still no luck? Ask the ALA what you can do about it. Put a bug in the local media's ear. If there is a "Library Friends" group of some kind, join it. Heck, get yourself on the library board. Don't just sit & bitch. Kick some ass!

      Now, check this bit from the article:

      Unfortunately, if an over-zealous special agent on a fishing expedition wants to know who checked out Anti-Flag's album The Terror State yesterday, the librarian will probably have little choice. Under the USA PATRIOT Act, he or she would have to surrender the personal identity information that was originally collected to protect the library's materials.

      Yeah, well... there's a reason must of us purge logs that would disclose personal circulation history (and similar info) on a daily basis. Doesn't neccessarily have anything to do with the Patriot Act o

    17. Re:Who will pay for this? by Thunderstruck · · Score: 1

      Cities will just say: You made ten thousand dollars on interest last year, so you won't mind if we cut next years budget by ten thousand.

      and

      and if you think that their funding won't be cut by the same amount they take in then you have never lived in a state the year after it starts a weekly lotery game and promisses that \$$x will go to the underfunded schools.

      Blast it all, stop raining on my utopia!

      --
      Trying to use sarcasm in text-based forums does not work.
    18. Re:Who will pay for this? by Scrameustache · · Score: 1

      It's tough enough already to keep stuff from being stolen. Add an anonymous aspect to the "I can just pay for this item instead of return it" attitude... my goodness! How on earth would we keep half of the stuff from walking out the door for good?

      Good point.
      I guess I uderestimated the truant element... I'll blame that on lack of sleep : )

      One last thing... as for being able to use different libraries as you travel... are you sure you can't already? A lot of libraries have an option specifically for the type of case you mention.

      I did not know that, last time I renewed my library card it took so much proofs that I was indeed living nearby that I simply assumed that stangers would be shot on sight in libraries. Well, allright then, I conceed the point, it's a solution looking for a problem... and librarians are venomous and cobra-like in their spitting abilities.

      --

      You can't take the sky from me...

    19. Re:Who will pay for this? by bbk · · Score: 1

      Sadly, this is all too true... I've worked for a nonprofit that had it's budget cut because they had money in a rainy day fund (which, unlike interest, isn't recurring income).

      So, because the board of directors was fiscally responsible, the city gouged them for it. What a bunch of shortsighted jerks.

    20. Re:Who will pay for this? by StarsAreAlsoFire · · Score: 1

      The fact that libraries exist, in major part, to serve people who don't have twenty dollars to leave lying in someone elses bank account.

      Libraries must be free. Always. They define what America is supposed to be.

      I have likened the abandonment of libraries to the fall of the American ideal. I consider it one of the most obvious 'canaries' we have.

      After all, if we cannot support the growth and self-education of our poorest classes, what hope do we have of clothing and feeding them? Or, more to the point, helping them cloth and feed themselves, with out aid from the state?

    21. Re:Who will pay for this? by hazelneion · · Score: 1

      Actually, once it got into to place, it would be an easier system to implement. First of all, if the library has one's 20 dollars, one is more likely to return the book on time. Secondly, the library is guarenteed money back if the book is not returned. Also, even the idea that the government can access one's library records is scary- especially considering the direction the US government is heading right now. I, for one, don't wish for the government to have access to the books I read. Not all of my opinions are that of the norm, and I don't relish the idea of that being on record.

      --
      -Sarah "The only thing worse than being talked about is not being talked about." (Oscar Wilde)
    22. Re:Who will pay for this? by Reziac · · Score: 1

      Back around 1977, the Moscow, Idaho city library would let anyone from anywhere borrow books, no ID required, and when you were done with the books, you just mailed them back -- and the library even provided the mailer and postage (no late fees charged, either). They told me that they lost very few books.

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
    23. Re:Who will pay for this? by TapeCutter · · Score: 1

      "See, I work for a library (sysadmin) and I can tell you straight up that librarians don't actually give a crap about fines, fees, and replacement charges."

      Nor should they.

      "Besides, this is a solution to a non-problem. Librarians are ingrained with the traditions of "freedom to read", and protecting patrons right to privacy in that regard. You think you hate the Patriot Act? Most librarians spit venom at any mention of it."

      Hating the Patriot act does not mean you are immune to it. The problem is secret bulk fishing expeditions that have occured in the past and will occur again in the future. This system makes it impossible for my name to appear in any such fishing expedition regardless of my local Library's information systems. With this system I don't have to rely on thier venom to protect my privacy, it is protected by default.

      "We don't care about what a person has checked out before..."

      Librarians are great defenders of my privacy and have my full confidence but an ID system must connect current borrowings to individuals, the proposed system means libraries no longer have to do that.

      "It's tough enough already to keep stuff from being stolen."

      Just because you don't have enough faith in people to come back and collect thier dough does not mean it will be treated like a bookstore. Early libraries were not free, you had to pay some sort of bond to ensure you brought the stuff back, somehow they survived. This system is not about money or books, it is about fortifying my privacy.

      --
      And did you exchange a walk on part in the war for a lead role in a cage? - Pink Floyd.
    24. Re:Who will pay for this? by gevantry · · Score: 1

      Hey, what a great way for libraries in Smalltown, Bible Belt, USA, to track not just suspected terrorist sympathizers, but also morally suspect folks who read such anti-Christian stuff as CATCHER IN THE RYE or HUCKLEBERRY FIN. It would make it so much easier to locate the socially cancerous so that they could be treated. At last, we could all live morally upright lives! Fingerprinting and other ID checks could be such a great thing in this social quest for probity, rectitude, and spiritual purity. Why, the merest inquiry about anonymous access should set off Orange Alert alarms back at Homeland Security Central!

    25. Re:Who will pay for this? by moonbender · · Score: 1

      The two systems aren't mutually exclusive, you know?

      --
      Switch back to Slashdot's D1 system.
    26. Re:Who will pay for this? by bbtom · · Score: 1

      Great post! It's great that librarians are taking privacy concerns seriously. I'm a frequent patron at lots of libraries (university, a big research library, local library out here in the sticks). Though I think libraries should destroy reading records, it would be interesting to get a big list of all the books I've read. The information is not a bad thing per se. It's just I want my information in my hands, not anybody elses.

      It would be extremely useful for researchers to get a list of everything they borrowed from a library with full details and everything. Currently, my university library lets you email the OPAC details of any books to yourself. This is extremely useful, as everytime I take some books out, I simply go to their website and email myself the full details. It would be nice if all libraries could do this automatically if you ask them for it - firing off an email with book details.

      Also, a "return date approaching" email a few days before would be nice, since libraries don't care about fines, they care about getting their stuff back (right?).

      Again, for any other librarians reading this, as a researcher, you have my thanks. You make my life a lot, lot easier...

      --
      catch (HumourFailureException e) { e.user.send("You, sir, are a humourless idiot."); }
    27. Re:Who will pay for this? by StarsAreAlsoFire · · Score: 1

      Yes. They are.

      Social stratification is bad enough without adding to it by introducing a class that can pay to be free of suspicion.

    28. Re:Who will pay for this? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Judging by my experience, (I've worked in libraries for over 10 years, in several different states) I'd say that 99% of public libraries accept volunteers, and quite a few are not unionized.

    29. Re:Who will pay for this? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Where I am (Canada) they are unionized and No you can't just work there.

    30. Re:Who will pay for this? by fingerfucker · · Score: 1

      If you are truly concerned about privacy, and how your library handles it, ask the librarians. They'll probably be happy to help you. They may even refer you to the director, invite you to a library board meeting, or put you in contact with a sysadmin that might be happy to chat.

      WTF, you're talking like the sysadmin is the king of everything. Don't overestimate the importance of your role. Sysadmin is an equivalent of a handiman, just like the programmer is an equivalent of a bricklayer.

    31. Re:Who will pay for this? by makohund · · Score: 1

      No, that's not what I'm saying. You're right of course, but that's not what I mean.

      I'm saying if you "are truly concerned about privacy and how your library handles it", there are a number of different people you can talk to for information.

      The director and the board can inform you about policies, and have the power to change them.

      The sysadmin can tell you about how those policies are put into action, and/or what actually happens with your data within the system.

      For example... what info is collected (or not) by the system, how long it is kept, what for, etc.

      In other words, technical details that others may/may not be familiar with, which might suffice to answer your questions. Info that might satisfy the average Slashdotter better than hearing a bigwig say "of course we protect your data" will.

      That is all.

    32. Re:Who will pay for this? by makohund · · Score: 1

      Hating the Patriot act does not mean you are immune to it.

      Of course not. But it means you are probably aware of it, can anticipate it, and are aware of its limitations.

      The problem is secret bulk fishing expeditions that have occured in the past and will occur again in the future.

      Exactly. Thing is, no one wants their business interrupted by fishing expeditions. The easiest way to prevent them is to keep no fish laying around. :) Unneccessary customer information should be discarded. Many systems do this anyway, as libraries have demanded customer privacy as a feature of their systems since long before the patriot act came about.

      This system makes it impossible for my name to appear in any such fishing expedition regardless of my local Library's information systems. With this system I don't have to rely on thier venom to protect my privacy, it is protected by default.

      True, but one of my main points... it may be protected by default anyway, no venom required. Unless they actively choose to retain data, it might not even be there to begin with. (And if they actively choose to retain data... wow. You probably want to know about it anyway, and a library making that kind of choice is even more unlikely to implement an anonymous checkout like the one proposed.)

      The only place we seem to differ is in regard to current checkouts.

      Just because you don't have enough faith in people to come back and collect thier dough does not mean it will be treated like a bookstore.

      This bit isn't a matter of "lacking faith". It is a simple matter of long term experience and observation of people doing exactly that... even in the face of obstacles to discourage the practice. This would remove all of them.

      Early libraries were not free, you had to pay some sort of bond to ensure you brought the stuff back, somehow they survived.

      True. However, these were not considered public libraries, and the borrowing certainly was not anonymous. There was incentive there to return materials beyond raw economics.

  5. Never work.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That means a government agency would actually have positive money at some point in time instead of increasing the national deficit / debt to get new books. Doesn't the PATRIOT act have something against anonymity here anyway? It's not as easily-tracked, so it can't be legal.

  6. everything so secretive? by mdew · · Score: 1

    Is there really a need to keep everything so secretive? damn, wheres my tin foil hat.

    --
    http://www.fanboy.co.nz/adblock/
    1. Re:everything so secretive? by pthor1231 · · Score: 1

      I for one agree with you here. BFD if you get your fingerprint scanned for library access. Unlikely that its going to happen anyways, other places have been using fingerprints for years. My mother was a substitute teacher, until they started requiring fingerprints for every teacher and substitute. Most people didn't complain, because it's not that big of a deal, and can help if something does go wrong.

    2. Re:everything so secretive? by anthro398 · · Score: 1
      Is there really a need to keep everything so secretive? damn, wheres my tin foil hat.


      Yes, there really is a need. Libraries are predicated on the principle that free and open access to information is the cornerstone of a democratic society. The Patriot Act violates that principle and violates the privacy of every user who must then fear government reprisal for seeking information. See http://www.ala.org/ala/oif/ifissues/fbiyourlibrary .htm for details.

      John Ashcroft? Is that you??
    3. Re:everything so secretive? by Irish_Samurai · · Score: 1
      It's really apparent how inundated you are with relenquishing your privacy rights in public school.

      BFD if you get your fingerprint scanned for library access.

      There should not be a way to track what books a person reads. I know for a fact that you are too young to know anything about McCarthyism. (Your birthday is in 77 days) Also, Libraries are underfunded and run mostly by volunteers. Knowing that the US is going to a national ID card in the next three years, where do you think enterprising Identity theives would focus their efforts? Could it be the very insecure libraries that have biometric data that can be easily correlated with local public records?
    4. Re:everything so secretive? by geoffspear · · Score: 1
      Exactly how old does one have to be to read a history book?

      I guess we can all by glad that 70+ year old computer geeks like you are around to tell us about McCarthy (I'm assuming you were an adult during the hearings, as someone under 18 could not possibly have understood all of the implications of what the Senator was doing).

      --
      Don't blame me; I'm never given mod points.
    5. Re:everything so secretive? by Irish_Samurai · · Score: 1

      There is no age requirement to read a history book, as you well know. Yet, the drive for the typical youngster (16-23) to actually go out and read one is another question altogether. Most kids this age have a very poor worldview, they just don't have the life experience.

      BTW, someone who DID understand the implications of McCarthyism would NOT go and say BFD to giving a fingerprint to check out a book now would they.

    6. Re:everything so secretive? by geoffspear · · Score: 1
      I know for a fact that you are too young to know anything about McCarthyism.

      Your quote. You may know for a fact that his argument seems to show that he's not familiar with all of the implications of letting the government look into your reading habits, the people you choose to associate with, etc. You do not, as you claimed, "know for a fact" that he's too young to know anything about McCarthy or any other topic for that matter.

      I don't disagree with your point, just your age-based ad hominem.

      --
      Don't blame me; I'm never given mod points.
    7. Re:everything so secretive? by Irish_Samurai · · Score: 1

      Ahhh...ok. The age reference was used not so much in
      me trying to bait him because he's young, but I was trying to make reference to the privacy issue by directing a comment to him regarding his age. I DO know how old that poster is, I also know his Birthdate and a couple of other facts. I easily found this information by doing a cursory check on him using free public tools. My attempt to relate this to him without posting his information could easily be construed as ad hominem.

    8. Re:everything so secretive? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How exactly does giving your address to borrow a book prevent free and open access to information?

      There is a place for privacy. This is not it.

      There is a place for paranoia. If you're that paranoid, then don't check out the book. Just read it in the library.

    9. Re:everything so secretive? by Big_Al_B · · Score: 1

      I for one agree with you here. BFD if you get your fingerprint scanned for library access.

      If it's no BFD for them to have my fingerprint, can I also assume it's no BFD for them not to have it? Good, then.

      Unlikely that its going to happen anyways,

      Is your opinion based on the current trend of government agencies wanting less access to citizen's personal information, and less investigative power? Oh, wait...

      Since when did we as citizens decide to trust the government so blindly? Our founding fathers based a lot of their work on a deep-seeded mistrust of governing powers. Wisdom lost to the ages, maybe?

      other places have been using fingerprints for years. My mother was a substitute teacher, until they started requiring fingerprints

      Public and private sector employers are engaging employees in business contracts for compensation. That's a very different relationship than a library has with a patron.

      Oh, and sorry about your mom. Is she up for parole soon? :^D

    10. Re:everything so secretive? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Stupid Question --

      Where is "free and open access" violated by providing personal details? When I sign up (well.. write my name on a card) at a library right now, I gain free and open access to all its resources. If the library were to change tommorow so that they also required my DOB and retina scan, all people going in would STILL have free and open access (well, assuming they were born, and have at least one eye...).

      Just because somebody can track you does NOT mean that you have lost your access. All it means is that your library habits can be known should somebody want to know them. You may rightfully find this a breach of privacy, but don't say that you've lost free and open access to your library.

  7. Not a good idea in the long run by glowimperial · · Score: 1, Interesting

    I'd rather not be anonymous at thge library. I'd rather have my reading list looked through than participate in a system meant to bypass the current political climate. By participating in an anonymous system, I would feel like I was legitimising the laws and practices that I feel are attacks at my personal liberty. By participating in a anonymous library card program, the situation that I find abhorrent might continue longer than it would under the current system

    1. Re:Not a good idea in the long run by Scrameustache · · Score: 1

      By participating in an anonymous system, I would feel like I was legitimising the laws and practices that I feel are attacks at my personal liberty.

      So, you think that by refusing to participate in their privacy intrusions, you'd be saying it's right to intrude on privacy?

      Say, how's the weather on bizarro world these days? Enjoying it there, are you?

      --

      You can't take the sky from me...

    2. Re:Not a good idea in the long run by leonardluen · · Score: 1

      i don't know what you are smoking, creating and participating in an anonymous system is the exact thing that will break the current climate that you find "abhorrent"

      if there is a lot of interest and participation in the new program then it will send a message that we don't like having everything we read looked over with a fine toothed comb. if you want the laws to change you need to express your dislike for the current laws, or no one will get the message and think everything is fine.

      this anonymous check out is a solution to your problem, yet you are rejecting it to keep the old system, i don't understand

    3. Re:Not a good idea in the long run by Overzeetop · · Score: 1

      Until you make a stink about somthing, most of the sheeple wont care. This is about poking The Man to see if he reacts. The current political climate is to try and trump anonymity at every position. Most of the time it doesn't matter, so most people figure that it wont affect them.

      The hope is that the government will squash this idea, resulting in some privacy "buzz" in the media. Somehting to counteract the stop-terrorism-by-burning-the-constitution "buzz" which has dominated the discussion so far.

      --
      Is it just my observation, or are there way too many stupid people in the world?
    4. Re:Not a good idea in the long run by gstoddart · · Score: 4, Insightful
      I'd rather not be anonymous at thge library. I'd rather have my reading list looked through than participate in a system meant to bypass the current political climate.

      Well, sometimes librarians are the only ones fighting for you to keep having some of these rights and not having your reading habits looked through.

      They seem to be the only ones who really appreciate the issues involved in the freedoms involved. Oft-times it's counrt challenges made by them that preserves such freedoms.

      By participating in an anonymous system, I would feel like I was legitimising the laws and practices that I feel are attacks at my personal liberty.

      By protecting your currently held rights to read what you want with privacy you legitimise attacks on your privacy?

      That's effectively saying that you concede that only criminals would want to keep things private from the government, so not-guilty people have nothing to hide.

      The US constitution was designed to prevent this kind of state-control of the citizenry, not make everyone who tries to uphold it into an outlaw.
      --
      Lost at C:>. Found at C.
    5. Re:Not a good idea in the long run by Kenrod · · Score: 1


      Well, sometimes librarians are the only ones fighting for you to keep having some of these rights

      And sometimes they're the ones turning you in. A 2003 Slate article claimed that the Feds had received over 50 tips from librarians who reported suspicious activity. This image of courageous librarians standing up to The Man is mostly nonsense. Most of them are concerned members of their communities, and not at all interested in the ACLU-fantasized rights of people to check out "Dummies Guide to Pipe Bombs".

      --
      Good heavens Miss Sakamoto - you're beautiful!
    6. Re:Not a good idea in the long run by liquidsin · · Score: 1

      I think the original poster's ideas may work. Why just get the anonymous card when you can increase the signal-to-noise ratio of the would-be observers? If everyone, instead of getting the anonymous card, took out an "interesting" book once a month or so, any attempts at monitoring library habits could be severely hampered. Think of it like email: instead of encrypting all of your email, just randomly send missives to a friend or another of your own accounts consisting of nothing but "bomb assassinate bush terror allah osama jihad" etc. If governments are going to monitor the private affairs of their citizens, it is a patriot's *duty* to flood the system with garbage, not to try to fly under the radar.

      --
      do not read this line twice.
    7. Re:Not a good idea in the long run by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's amazing how easily "50" jumps to "most" when you're a slavering fascist wankboy.

    8. Re:Not a good idea in the long run by gstoddart · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Most of them are concerned members of their communities, and not at all interested in the ACLU-fantasized rights of people to check out "Dummies Guide to Pipe Bombs".

      ACLU-fantasized????

      How about Supreme Court established. There is no provision in the Constitution to abridge the rights spelled out therein because you want to. That's what MCarthy tried to do, and the climate at the time allowed him to get pretty far with it.

      The consequences of the first and fourth ammendments is that you have a rock solid right to read these things, hang out with other people who have read these things, and be free of extra-ordinary scrutiny for having read these things.

      One thing you'll find about attorneys/groups that vigilantly defend these freedoms, is a willingless to defend the ability of people to say controversial things. I may not side with, for example, white supremecists. But I sure as hell defend their right to advocate such positions -- as long as it stops short of incitement to do violence and the like.

      The reason is simple -- those rights in your Constitution (I'm not American) are intended to be absolute and guaranteed to everyone. Not the ones who are politically sanitized and sanctioned by the current administration.

      The laws of the US are founded on a moral authority. When you selectively apply that law, you erode that moral authority -- kind of like what the current administration seems to be happy to do. In the long-run, your constitution will prevail. In the short run, people keep trying to do an end-run around it.

      --
      Lost at C:>. Found at C.
  8. Only $20? by Marii · · Score: 4, Informative

    I work in a library. $20 is a small fine... many users end up with over $50, and I've seen hundreds owing (it's not that hard.. lose 4 hardcovers and that's nearly $200 right there). I would only think this would work if the deposit was much higher.. but of course then no one would use it.

    1. Re:Only $20? by pthor1231 · · Score: 1

      Yea, thats for losing a book, and those people aren't sane anyways. For simply checking out a book, to have to pay the amount it costs is rediculous.

    2. Re:Only $20? by Mononoke · · Score: 1
      Yea, thats for losing a book, and those people aren't sane anyways. For simply checking out a book, to have to pay the amount it costs is rediculous.
      It's a security deposit. Some people don't lose books, they keep them. The library wouldn't want to "sell" books for 20% of their replacement costs.

      --
      NetInfo connection failed for server 127.0.0.1/local
    3. Re:Only $20? by Eivind · · Score: 2, Insightful
      If you read the article you would've noticed that offcourse with such a system they'd only allow you to borrow stuff with a total value smaller than your deposit.

      In other words, if you want to check out 5 hardcovers at a time, you're going to have to deposit more than $20.

    4. Re:Only $20? by _iris · · Score: 1

      You (or, rather, your card) should build credit with the library for each item returned in the same condition as when you borrowed it, not to surpass, say 100%, maybe 200%.

    5. Re:Only $20? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They could do that, and they could also keep record of the number of times you've 'applied' for an anonymous card (without actually linking you to the anonymous account in any way, the actual borrowing would be disconnected). This way, if someone is gaming the system by building trust and then walking off with cheap books, then applying for another card, they will raise a flag when they've applied for 3 or more anonymous cards.

    6. Re:Only $20? by gurps_npc · · Score: 1

      Your logic is seriously flawed. $20 was an example, not "the price". If you want to take out $20 worth of books, you buy a $20 card. If you want to take out $100 worth of books, you buy a $100 card. The poorer people would have the choice of either using standard identiy cards or just spending a smaller amount of money and getting one book at a time. And the smarter people would probably use both. Use my Driver's License for the book about general american history, and the $23.50 card I purchased to take out the book about the history of the Manhattan Project.

      --
      excitingthingstodo.blogspot.com
    7. Re:Only $20? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      i too did work in an (german) public library the problem is not only the loosing of books
      its the damaging too
      i got comments like:
      oh yes i marked the part to which i did read everytime with a pen (never heard of bookmarks?)
      well it was raining so i hold the book over me ...
      oh yes my coffe cup was on top of the cd

      these people just dont want to see that its not a free book, its borrowed and other people want to use it too
      of course this ppl had to pay fines, but much of them did say: i will pay next time
      and they wouldnt come back to us knowing it would be too much work for us to get them to court and make them pay the fines
      but 20 to 50 bucks which we hold back from them would be a good reason to pay their fines (normally ca 1 to 12 Euro, highest i've ever seen where 300,-)

    8. Re:Only $20? by Jeremy+Erwin · · Score: 1

      Upon graduating college, I received a bill from the library for "losing" a book. The bill was for $75. The book, if purchased at a local bookstore, would cost all of $10.95.

      The $75 charge was apparently a consortium-wide standard fee. It would serve as a fine, and would pay for a librarian to determine if the title was still relevant, for cataloguing costs and for rebinding (if necessary),

      What happens if the reader checks out an out-of-print book?

    9. Re:Only $20? by Suppafly · · Score: 1

      What I've never understood is that libraries always fine you the cover price of a new copy of the book, not what they originally paid for the book or what they would actually pay to repurchase the book.

      If Joe Public can pick up the book for 30% off the cover price at the local grocery store, you'd think they library could get it even cheaper considering the thousands of books they purchase every year.

    10. Re:Only $20? by darkfrog · · Score: 1

      It would be nice if your deposit was as large or small as you wanted. Then you could take out as many books/media as your deposit would cover. So if I wanted to take out $200 worth of books I could put a $200 deposit, but if I wanted to take out $10 worth of books I just have to put down $10.

      --
      --DarkFrog
      If the dead rise again, we're going to have some serious population control issues.
    11. Re:Only $20? by darkfrog · · Score: 1

      But then, why wouldn't I just "buy" (aka, not return books I check out) from the library, instead of amazon.com?

      --
      --DarkFrog
      If the dead rise again, we're going to have some serious population control issues.
  9. Internet Access by Mattygfunk1 · · Score: 1

    I signed up at my local the other day, because I had to to use their Internet access, even though I didn't want to borrow books.

    Presumably this is a reference for them in case you do something naughty online, which wouldn't still be required under the anonymous borrowing.

    Your standard Internet cafe doesn't need ID, so are libraries really as "privacy concious" as the summary makes out?

    __
    Laugh Daily free funny videos
    1. Re:Internet Access by thelaw · · Score: 1
      Your standard Internet cafe also doesn't operate at taxpayer expense, so they don't particularly care if you h4x0r the m4tr|>< from their computers. All they want is your cold, hard, plastic.

      Libraries, by contrast, have to satisfy the city council, state legislature, and federal funding sources that their computers are not being used to commit illegal acts (not that they can't be, just that they aren't). So they have to keep stricter control over the publicly-funded infrastructure to keep the various funding sources.

      --
      -- http://www.cerastes.org
    2. Re:Internet Access by aborchers · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Librarians as a profession (http://ala.org/) are privacy conscious. That doesn't necessarily mean that the policies of an individual public library, funded and run by the local political system, will be.

      --
      Trouble making decisions? Just flip for it.
    3. Re:Internet Access by Library+Spoff · · Score: 1

      >>funded and run by the local political system
      or underfunded in the case of my employer...

      The head of our council is quoted as saying:
      "Book fund! why do they need a book fund? they've a building full of books."

      --
      Acid House saves Souls
    4. Re:Internet Access by blue_adept · · Score: 1

      Presumably this is a reference for them in case you do something naughty online, which wouldn't still be required under the anonymous borrowing.

      Besdies, if you wanted to surf with anonymity, you could go here:
      http://anonycat.com/
      That's a plug for my site, which just went online today. the anonymizing classes are free/open source.

      --

      "Is this just useless, or is it expensive as well?"
    5. Re:Internet Access by Omnieiunium · · Score: 1

      Hmm.. I know at our public library, you can walk right in and sit down at a desk and just access a high-speed wireless internet. It's great.

  10. Library != Bookstore by pjwhite · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Thats great if you want to turn the library into a bookstore. Dropping $15 (or whatever) for a book is no big deal for some people and they will feel no obligation to return the book.

    1. Re:Library != Bookstore by Frohboy · · Score: 1

      I think you misunderstand the example given.

      The idea is that you put down a deposit equal to or greater than the value of the item you are borrowing.

      Sure, you could lose your $15 and run off with the library's copy of The Terror State, but you could just as easily buy yourself a brand new copy (which has never had anyone else's grubby little fingers or coffee stains on it) for less than $15 at Amazon. If you do run off with the library's copy, they can order a new one with the money you gave them.

    2. Re:Library != Bookstore by pla · · Score: 1

      Dropping $15 (or whatever) for a book is no big deal for some people and they will feel no obligation to return the book.

      I fail to see the problem... If libraries can make money by people keeping books, that just means less money the public needs to spend to fund them.

      Not that I don't fully support public funding for libraries... Hell, I consider them one of the few good uses for my tax dollars. But if they can reduce their dependence on public funding without reducing the services they provide, well, I see very little to object to in that.

      They just need to set a policy that if you keep a book for longer than the, say, twice the standard loaning period, you can only return it for your deposit back if they happen to need another copy, to allow them to replace books that people decide to keep in a timely manner.

    3. Re:Library != Bookstore by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Dropping $15 (or whatever) for a book is no big deal for some people and they will feel no obligation to return the book.

      Great! Just make sure that the depoist is high enough, and the library can replace the books and make a profit at the same time.

    4. Re:Library != Bookstore by Idarubicin · · Score: 1
      Thats great if you want to turn the library into a bookstore. Dropping $15 (or whatever) for a book is no big deal for some people and they will feel no obligation to return the book.

      Charge a "processing fee" or the like as part of the deposit. The book costs twenty-five dollars, but the processing fee adds another fifteen or twenty; both would be refunded when the book is returned. The processing fee would cover the library's costs to purchase a replacement book, add it into the collection, all the other overhead, and maybe a few bucks for a "collection expansion fund".

      Make the replacement fee substantially higher for books out of print or otherwise difficult to replace or valuable to the collection. As long as the borrower is informed of the deposit amount up front, there shouldn't be anything wrong with this technique.

      My understanding is that many libraries already charge a "handling fee" of some kind when you lose a book; why wouldn't they do that under this system too? It covers the library's costs, but it also makes using the library as a bookstore economically unpalatable.

      --
      ~Idarubicin
    5. Re:Library != Bookstore by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "The idea is that you put down a deposit equal to or greater than the value of the item you are borrowing."

      How is that possible with books that are simply irreplaceable due to being long out of print? This is the sort of book I usually check out from the library... if it gets lost or destroyed, it's simply gone.

      Of course, the current system doesn't do anything about that either, but trying to attach a dollar amount to any decent library's inventory would be tricky at best.

    6. Re:Library != Bookstore by makohund · · Score: 1

      Well, part of the problem is that the item is meant to be available to the public. The turnaround time neccessary to replace "kept" books is time that the item is unavailable for use, when it shouldn't be.

      Another part of the problem is cost. The typical replacement fee + processing charge really doesn't pay for the entire cost. Adjustments could be made of course... but that cost might be higher than you'd think.

      Another one... libraries get books at a steep discount. Even after fees, it might be less than retail. Good luck retaining a collection in that scenario.

      Along with that, if libraries were selling books for a profit, vendors would end those discounts pretty quickly. Whoops! Boy would that screw up a few budgets (and bang for your tax buck).

      In many places it is simply not legal for government entities to compete with private businesses. (Or to turn a profit, for that matter.) Even if that were all fixed and it were legal... what would happen to local support from businesses? (Such as bookstores, music stores, movie rental/sales joints, etc.) Chamber of Commerce vs. Library. Oh, joy!

      Jeez... I could keep going.

      I actually understand what you are getting at, and find it admirable. But from my vantage point, I don't see how it could work. (It's always the little things, that may not be obvious at first, or to those outside of the playing field.)

  11. finally by malchusproductions · · Score: 1

    Here's an example: If a privacy-minded user deposits $20 to get an anonymous library card... Finally I can check out all of books with naughty and dangerous information!!!! Seriously, I like the idea of people not knowing I read Star Trek novels.

    --
    011110010110111101110101 011000010111001001100101 01100100011101010110110101100010
    1. Re:finally by rufty_tufty · · Score: 1

      I thought that was why you didn't normally have cute librarians on the desk - so you could take out geeky books without that really sad feeling.

      --
      "The weirdest thing about a mind, is that every answer that you find, is the basis of a brand new cliche" -
    2. Re:finally by Gabrill · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      Trust me, they need no more proof of your geekdom than your ID at Slashdot.

      Of course, then they would be proving themselves just as geeky, so it's win-win.

      --
      Always going forward, 'cause we can't find reverse.
  12. Sets a dangerous precedent by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If you start offering anonymous library cards, it would be very easy for libraries to move to a system that tracks what you do at the library, and offer you an easy anonmyous library card if you want to be anomyous.

    This by itself sets a very dangerous precedent. If in the future all libraries become monitored, then one day it'll be 'easier' for them to shut down the anonymous library card system, than it was to initiate a library monitoring system.

  13. Interest free loan? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Much as I love my local library I'd rather not give it an interest free loan of my money.

    Also some of the reference books I'm interested in are quite expensive, I'm not putting down £100 everytime I want a book out.

    Really the library having my details is least of my security concerns at the momment.

    1. Re:Interest free loan? by ylikone · · Score: 1

      Why not give them a interest free loan? It's not like you're not getting something in return.

      --
      Meh.
    2. Re:Interest free loan? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What, do you live in some Emerging 3rd world country where inflation in 500%? If that is the case you should never carry cash, just think of all the interest you will be missing out on.

      If you don't think it is worth a few cents in interest, read the book there, or spend a lot more than a few cents and buy it.

  14. Why is this even necessary? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    One would think that the very thought of the government keeping tabs on what it's citizens are READING at a PUBLIC LIBRARY is enough to make the bile rise in your stomach.

    So, you get people doing things like this. It's quite interesting that you are allowed to have an anonymous card, but you can't have your information protected if you just wanted a normal card. That's the part that confuses me.

    1. Re:Why is this even necessary? by pthor1231 · · Score: 1

      Right, because the current system in places, across the entire country, isn't one where your name and home adress is on file, and if it was of any importance to the government, they can already do that. SO WHAT. It is a public library, in the sense that it is a service to the public. Since when does anyone have the right to anonymity in public?

    2. Re:Why is this even necessary? by ScentCone · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Remember the old, completely paper-driven library cards of 30+ years ago? The borrower's name was written on the card, and every borrower before them was on a permanent list. No anonymity there at all. More recently, you were issued a bar-coded card that tracked what you borrowed against your name. No anonymity there, either (because, if you don't return the book, they need to know who's running around with a $50 copy of a coffee-table Leonardo DaVinci collection, or whatever).

      Now, you walk into a library, as you've been able to do for centuries, pull a book off the shelf, sit down, and read it. Put it back. There's no tracking involved, never has been (except perhaps at the Library Of Congress and some other huge collections where you have to put in a request for the book to be brought out - and there's been no anonymity there, either). But if you want to walk away with the book, they want to know who's got it. Why is that a bad thing? If you want to temporarily take posession of something that the taxpayers paid for (or which was donated to the community by a private party), it's certainly reasonable for the community to have in place a way to get hold of that person when they don't return the item, or to charge them a fee if they hang onto it for longer than is reasonable.

      Now, you walk into a library and want to use the internet. Fine. But suppose your entire purpose of using that service is to phish, defraud, or otherwise be bad? If some merchant somewhere tracks a fraud attempt, or a bank tracks the use of a stolen credit card back to an IP address mapped to a machine in a facility provided by taxpayers, isn't it reasonable to be able to figure out who was driving at the time they were committing a crime? The fingerprinting issue was about computer use. Biometrics are about making sure you are who you say you are, so that lifting an acquaintence's card doesn't allow you to commit crimes in her name using public facilities.

      That said, I don't think I'd want a bored IT intern at a library able to troll through proxy logs and see, by name, who was looking at what on the web. Biometrics should just be a hash, and that sort of log data should be just like financial transaction data, with need-to-know one-way storage. Yes, that can be cracked. But so can everything if you can't trust anyone, ever. If a municipality, county, or school wants to continue to offer free computer/net use, but wants to mitigate the obviously real risk of people running scams from their network, they should certainly have the option of doing something about it. It's all about transparency, though: letting the users know what's being collected when they sign on, and generally how it's being protected and under what circumstances (subpeona, etc) it can be retrieved.

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    3. Re:Why is this even necessary? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The service a library provides is severely impaired if people are afraid to use it to obtain the information they really want, for fear of DHS agents deciding they fit some undesirable profile.

      Because libraries must now supply Federal agents with their records under veil of secrecy, nobody can know to what extent the DHS is obtaining these records. There's no way to estimate the risk that you're being watched. This (reasonably) multiplies that fear.

      Therefore, libraries should investigate ways to provide anonymity, pursuant to their core mission: provision of information to the public.

    4. Re:Why is this even necessary? by malkavian · · Score: 1

      I don't believe it's the anonymity, per se, that's the issue.
      Back in the "Good ol' days" of paper cards, if an agency wanted to know who was reading particular books, they'd have to send an agent round, look through the files, and note the names down on paper.
      Frequently, libraries didn't actually keep a reference of who HAD borrowed a book in the past, merely who has it at the moment (at least that's the way it worked in the UK).
      To monitor it would take a lot of agent time, work and effort, meaning that those in power needed to think very very carefully about what they did keep an eye on.

      If it really was something threatening to national security, and a life or death thing, you can bet they'd hang the expense and give the cat a goldfish, so to speak, and put in the time and effort.

      These days, with little to no cost to themselves, govenment agencies can put a bill up attached to something else, and at a stroke force places to keep any kind of information they can think of. And give the agencies access to it simply and easily.

      Really, it's a police state dream, of being able to watch everyone all the time (C.F. 1984).

      Solutions like the 'anonymous library card' are simply a way of returning to days when people were treated as people, in the main, not as 'security threats' and 'potential copyright infringers' by govenment and commerce respectively.
      What it does is force the powers that be to sit back, and for once, actually THINK about what information they really need, because all of a sudden, it'll cost them to collate it. And yes, this anonymous is only so anonymous. If it's important, they'll get you in the end. It'll just cost more than it's worth to identify a few 'potential political dissidents'.

      Maybe if enough of them actually had to think instead of waving pens to create new data gathering laws, more of the ranks of government would turn round and say "Well, actually, we think it's a little paranoid, and a daft idea at the end of the day. What's next on the agenda?".

    5. Re:Why is this even necessary? by djmurdoch · · Score: 1

      Now, you walk into a library and want to use the internet. Fine. But suppose your entire purpose of using that service is to phish, defraud, or otherwise be bad? If some merchant somewhere tracks a fraud attempt, or a bank tracks the use of a stolen credit card back to an IP address mapped to a machine in a facility provided by taxpayers, isn't it reasonable to be able to figure out who was driving at the time they were committing a crime?

      By the same token, all uses of a public telephone should be recorded, just in case the call was used to plan something illegal.

      In fact, why not record the whole phone call? And why limit it to public phones? You might have gone to your friend's house to plan your next terrorist attack.

    6. Re:Why is this even necessary? by ScentCone · · Score: 1

      Well, I think anonymity really is what it's all about. We're not talking about who's borrowing which books, here, anyway. We're talking about who's walking in to use net-connected boxes to, say, interact with sites and message boards that are being hosted by killers, or who are using them to log into a mailbox somewhere and download the day's collections from their phishing bots, or who are using them to send threatening e-mails to fellow students, etc.

      Certainly the "cost" of retrieving that data should be in the cost of persuading a panel of judges that it's appropriate to do so. I don't think there's any merit in deliberately ratcheting up the actual tax dollars it costs to pursue a scam artist, stalker, or Hamas money launderer just because it's a form of brake on the law enforcement people. You're saying make it actually expensive and time consuming because we can't trust ourselves. I'm saying set the legal bar higher, and save the money (or spend it on things, like education, that might convince some twits to do something besides rip people off for a living).

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    7. Re:Why is this even necessary? by ScentCone · · Score: 1

      But you're not walking up to a payphone and getting it "free" because it's been funded with tax dollars. And your friend's house, phone, and net access is not a taxpayer-funded "public" facility. That's the whole point: if someone wants to use something that we (as taxpayers) have paid for, then that person can't complain when there are some limitations in the nature of that thing we bought for them. If they don't like it, they can use their own personal systems (just like we do), and if their reason for going to the library to surf is so that they don't leave a trail from their personal system, you've got to wonder what they're hiding. Never the less, this isn't any different than any other government-provided service. You can't get welfare, medicare, city services, a license to drive on public roads, or really much of anything else like that without introducing yourself. Why should sitting down in front of a computer and network paid for by me (and you) be a wide-open avenue, with no recourse, for people to attack me (and you)? None of this applies when you put money into a payphone, because you're purchasing a service from a common or private carrier. None of this applies when you use your friend's equipment and services, because he's doing the same.

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    8. Re:Why is this even necessary? by djmurdoch · · Score: 1

      I think you're missing the point: libraries *want* to provide anonymous services. It's not users demanding this, and libraries saying "we're taxpayer funded, so you have to put up with our monitoring".

      Why should sitting down in front of a computer and network paid for by me (and you) be a wide-open avenue, with no recourse, for people to attack me (and you)?

      Because librarians think that distributing information is good, even when some of it is false. They think that restricting the distribution of information is bad, and that invading their patrons' privacy is bad.

      None of this applies when you put money into a payphone, because you're purchasing a service from a common or private carrier.

      I think it depends on the contract with the phone company whether you're purchasing a service from them or from the owner of the location where the phone is installed, but surely getting something for free or getting it for $0.25 shouldn't make such a fundamental difference to whether you have a right to expect privacy or not.

    9. Re:Why is this even necessary? by malkavian · · Score: 1

      Hmm.. You seem to be associating basic web access with having an anonymous email account (sending threatening letters to fellow students).
      If the cost is worth it (investigation into a scammer/phisher/harasser), you know the ip address it came from (library) the time of day, so you examine the proxy logs, and identify the terminal.
      Many places have security cams nowadays.
      Get those and you have the person.
      Others, well, you can ask for the description of the person using the terminal at that time of day.
      Those are the things that'll actually capture a criminal.
      Otherwise you may well end up on the doorstep of some old chap who's had his identity appropriated, and the library account set up in his name.
      The point is that the electronic trawling won't catch you the people you're saying you think it will. It'll only net you the ones that are net illiterate (the average user who just wants a few minutes on the net).
      There are way way way too many other, less public ways of getting into the net if you don't want to be found.
      Wardialling, wardriving, Net cafes with appropriated identities, anonymous net cafes etc.
      Libraries are just too much of a risk.

      And actually, from the story headline (and the article about the anonymous cards), we are talking about who's borrowing which books, DVDs and everything else borrowable. I don't think the article once mentioned net access, which is a whole other story.

    10. Re:Why is this even necessary? by ScentCone · · Score: 1

      No, I'm not confused about this. The thread was initially about biometrics (like a thumbprint scan) as the user sits down to use the machine in question. That's exactly what prevents the "old chap" from being implicated in the illegal activities of someone else attempting to act in his name. Agreed that the original article is talking about anonymous borrowing (using a cash balance as collateral), but the thread wandered off into the earlier discussions about biometrics in the library - and that's what I was responding too. Sorry if it's off topic.

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    11. Re:Why is this even necessary? by ScentCone · · Score: 1

      Because librarians think that distributing information is good, even when some of it is false.

      But in the case of sitting down at a web-connected workstation in a library to launch a worm, or interact with a bot network, or send fraudulant mail, you're not dealing with the same issues. The library is less and less about shelves full of books, and they can't really make their web access useful if people can't type things into web browsers. Making such things minimally useful to patrons immediately makes them very useful to criminals, too.

      but surely getting something for free or getting it for $0.25 shouldn't make such a fundamental difference to whether you have a right to expect privacy or not.

      First, nothing is free. You're paying for it, or someone else (like taxpayers) is paying for it. Taxpayers, individually, have no choice in the specifics of how those funds are used, and so there are rules and regs about taxpayer-funded facilities of all sorts that keep the use of those things reasonable to most people. Whether you're using a web workstation at a library (paid for out of local taxes) or you're using a payphone into which you're putting a quarter - someone is paying. But when you're paying, you can certainly expect a different privacy framework than when you use something that I'm paying for.

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    12. Re:Why is this even necessary? by mark_jabroni · · Score: 1
      One would think that the very thought of the government keeping tabs on what it's citizens are READING at a PUBLIC LIBRARY is enough to make the bile rise in your stomach.

      It is, to about everyone, including most supporters of the PATRIOT act. Myself, for example.

      However, there's a big difference between tracking what ordinary citizens are reading and being able to easily subpoena the library records of a suspected terrorist.

      Keep in mind, too, that library records were not out-of-bounds in criminal investigations prior to PATRIOT ... it's just that they are now easier to obtain.

    13. Re:Why is this even necessary? by geoffspear · · Score: 1
      I guess you'll be first in line to vote YES on a constitutional amendment eliminating the secret ballot in elections, too. And releasing all of your tax returns to the public. And medical records from any public-funded hospitals.

      Fascist asshat.

      --
      Don't blame me; I'm never given mod points.
    14. Re:Why is this even necessary? by rabel · · Score: 1

      I believe I understand where you're coming from: You feel that since your tax dollars are paying for it, then the use of that taxpayer-funded service should be monitored.

      First of all, I don't get to track the use of all my tax dollars. So-called "black ops" or whatever immediately jump to mind where I, as an individual taxpayer, do not have any right to know what my tax dollars are doing (and I probably wouldn't approve of it, either). In our government with it's huge tax rolls, you simply will not be able to track every dollar spent.

      But that's not really the point here. I personally like the idea of putting up a block that the State must go through in order to get private information. What I'm surfing for on the net is not public information.

      The real point is, just as with free speech, in order to protect access to ALL information, we must put up with some bit of unsavoriness in the information that is accessed. It is absolutely NOT the State's job to tell it's citizens what public information it can access. Giving the State access to the list of which citizens are accessing which information, be it books, websites, CD's, whatever... is a de-facto limitation as to what information is accessed.

      The classic example is the whistleblower. One can dream up all sorts of examples of this. In order to protect yourself you go to the public library to look up information to verify your claims, or perhaps even to look-up what your rights as a whistleblower are. If you know that the government has easy-access to all information accesses, you may be better-served by just keeping your big mouth shut and not risking loosing your job... or worse.

      So, yeah, we may have to put up with the occassional "worm, or interact with a bot network, or send fraudulant mail", etc.. but that's the TRUE price we pay for freedom.

      Your freedom and personal safety are much, MUCH more threatened by an out of control government then it is by some looser running his phishing scam from the public library.

    15. Re:Why is this even necessary? by djmurdoch · · Score: 1

      Public libraries operate under a code of ethics. The third principle of this code is

      "We protect each library user's right to privacy and confidentiality with respect to information sought or received and resources consulted, borrowed, acquired or transmitted."

      This isn't something secret, it's right out there on the ALA web site, and I'm sure it's available on paper in most libraries. This is what you're paying for. Violations of this code are violations of your rights as a taxpayer.

      If you disagree with this principle, I suppose you could lobby the ALA to change it, or you could lobby your government to stop funding public libraries, but saying that the libraries should violate this principle because they are publicly funded is just plain wrong.

    16. Re:Why is this even necessary? by ScentCone · · Score: 1

      We protect each library user's right to privacy and confidentiality with respect to information sought or received and resources consulted, borrowed, acquired or transmitted.

      I guess I'm wondering if that principle was written before or after libraries started doubling as internet cafes? I'm not being glib, I'm just thinking that it makes perfect sense when you look at the library as research tool, but it's a little anachronistic now that they can be used as cybercrime field offices. Just wondering, in real life, how many library IT or management people truly don't worry about that sort of thing, and can't conceive of any means or measure they'd embrace to discourage or, in the case of a court order, manage to dig up logs related to, illegal use.

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    17. Re:Why is this even necessary? by djmurdoch · · Score: 1

      Read the whole page. The rules aren't absolute, they're guiding principles. If librarians had reason to believe that someone was violating the law in their library, I imagine they'd violate that user's privacy.

      But the point is, taking away privacy is bad. You shouldn't take away everyone's privacy, just because you have a theory that some library users are criminals.

    18. Re:Why is this even necessary? by ScentCone · · Score: 1

      But isn't that the whole point of logs of all sorts? It's data you can go to if you need to, and if a judge says you have the authority to. That's just as true of a publicly held companies books as it is school enrollment records, medical records, and all sorts of other quite private things that are only made not private when there's a convincing reason for it. But to spend tax dollars on services that are shown to be regularly used for nefarious things, and not even have the capacity to know, under court orders, who was (say, cracking into school records, or sending ZIPed up financial files to a recipient in Hamas or crypto goodies to North Korea, whatever) from a library's equipment - that's just dumb, when that info can be secured just fine, but can't be synthesized if it's never logged.

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    19. Re:Why is this even necessary? by djmurdoch · · Score: 1

      I guess some people value privacy more than you do. I'm glad they're the librarians, and you're not.

    20. Re:Why is this even necessary? by ScentCone · · Score: 1

      I deal with sensitive (very) private (very) information that could impact people's family finances, careers, businesses, employers, investors and more every day. I value my privacy, and the privacy of others to a nearly religious degree. Now, I also spend a good part of my day dealing with criminals trying to break into, steal, deface, and otherwise devalue the very things that I build and protect. Many, many of those attacks originate from public networks - including schools, libraries, dorms, etc. Because I know that information can be properly squirreled away, and I know that I don't have to give it up absent court orders, I'm comfortable with my position. Privacy and law enforcement are not mutually exclusive.

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    21. Re:Why is this even necessary? by djmurdoch · · Score: 1

      I value my privacy, and the privacy of others to a nearly religious degree.

      And yet you think that the ALA ethical principle of protecting the privacy of their patrons is anachronistic.

      I'm afraid I don't understand what principle you would replace it with. Instead of "We protect each library user's right to privacy and confidentiality with respect to information sought or received and resources consulted, borrowed, acquired or transmitted", what would you suggest?

    22. Re:Why is this even necessary? by ScentCone · · Score: 1

      I wouldn't replace that, I would append to it for clarity. Make it clear that people there have the same expectation of privacy that they have at, say, their doctor's office - where even the most intimate details, no matter how appropriately protected by HIPAA, can be dug out by court-approved investigations if it looks serious enough (just ask Rush Limbaugh!). Privacy, while using publicly provided equipment and networks, is not the same thing as absolute anonymity. Operating international communications hubs from which people can remotely plant or manipulate data anonymously cannot be considered a long-term, historical, traditional library activity. You indicated earlier that if a librarian thought a user was up to no good that that would the time to act. But how would the librarian know? Looking over the user's shoulder? Evaluating shifty-looking visitor hair styles? And even with those suspicions, however justified, what mechanism would the librarian use to demonstrate the user's illegal activities, absent some form of logging and user identity?

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    23. Re:Why is this even necessary? by djmurdoch · · Score: 1

      You indicated earlier that if a librarian thought a user was up to no good that that would the time to act. But how would the librarian know?

      Presumably because someone like you would have called up the library to say that a breakin was in progress, or had just finished.

      However, I think this is very unlikely to happen. You said that you get breakin attempts from libraries, dorms, etc. all the time. I think most of those are likely compromised machines acting as zombies, they don't actually have a human being sitting at them to be arrested.

      This is why I think your proposed monitoring of library patrons is useless and potentially dangerous. It's useless, because most abuse of library PCs is probably done by people who aren't in the library, and the logs aren't going to help to find them. It's dangerous, because it's very likely the logs won't be protected adequately (the machines are compromised, after all), and will potentially be distributed and published.

      Doctors need to keep records to do their jobs. Libraries don't need long term records, and shouldn't keep them.

    24. Re:Why is this even necessary? by evilviper · · Score: 1
      The borrower's name was written on the card, and every borrower before them was on a permanent list. No anonymity there at all.

      Not true. Your name would be on paper, but collecting all those seperate pieces of information together to get a list of what someone reads would involve going through every book in every library that you go to.

      ANONYMITY IS NOT ABSOLUTE. They could also interview everyone in the library to determine what books you've read, but that would be so difficult to do, that most people would still consider that a perfectly good level of anonymity.

      More recently, you were issued a bar-coded card that tracked what you borrowed against your name. No anonymity there, either

      Nobody said that was anonymous. What has changed in the past few years is how EASY it is for the GOVERNMENT to get that information, without probable cause, without notifying you, etc.
      --
      Slashdot gets worse every day... Pipedot: News for nerds, without the corporate slant
    25. Re:Why is this even necessary? by bbtom · · Score: 1

      That is one of the main arguments I have against anyone who says "if you've got nothing to hide, you've got nothing to fear" when things like new scary ID cards and Patriot-style laws come up. If you've got nothing to hide, you should be happy to get your bank to send statements on a postcard. You should be happy to publish your itemised phone bill online for all to see.

      If you have a problem with showing these things, or any doubt regarding the government's use of such data, you do have something to hide. Congratulations. Nothing to be ashamed of. I have lots to hide, not because it's dangerous or illegal or immoral. Just because it's my stuff and I prefer it hidden in my head or in a secure location than it being in the public domain.

      --
      catch (HumourFailureException e) { e.user.send("You, sir, are a humourless idiot."); }
    26. Re:Why is this even necessary? by bbtom · · Score: 1

      I'm not sure about the Library of Congress, but I'm a Reader at the British Library (that just means I'm a researcher who's got a ticket to use the library). I've just sent them an email enquiring about their privacy policy for Readers (the BL is a stack-request library, and a dang good one at that).

      I'll post any response I get here (if it comes soon) or on my blog. Drop me a line (bbtommorris ~at~ gmail ~dot~ com) if you want me to tell you of any response I get.

      I will also make enquiries next term over library policies at my university and my specific college (we have a university-wide general library and a specific library for my discipline).

      Anyone else who uses research or academic libraries should consult them on their privacy policy for patrons - reference and borrowing - and bring any examples of good and bad practices to the public attention (I'll do my bit: email me with anything you find).

      If you are in the United Kingdom, libraries which do not give you helpful information quickly or reasonably can be sorted by using the Data Protection Act 1984 request system.

      You simply send your name and details and the current fee (I think it's £10) and the Data Protection Registrar has to send back in a reasonably quick period all the data that the organisation holds on you. (This used to apply to CCTV which was extremely cool!) If they do not provide information or do not do it in a timely or reasonable fashion, you can make a complaint to the Commissioner of whichever bureau it is that handles Data Protection (I forget, but it's easy enough to Google for).

      From D,P,A, requests, you should be able to find out what information a library holds on you and your borrowing record.

      --
      catch (HumourFailureException e) { e.user.send("You, sir, are a humourless idiot."); }
  15. reason for them to check you out by krunk4ever · · Score: 2, Insightful

    i have an interesting story regarding my friend's incident at the airport security. at the security checkpoint, my friend was about to walk through the metal detector. he had on white sneakers, which usually aren't required to be taken off.

    the metal detector guard asked if my friend wanted to take off his shoes. he didn't request it, just asked if he wanted to. my friend, being lazy, of course said he'd rather just walk through. the moment he expressed this, he was asked for follow the guard and they went into one of those corners and he closed the drapes around him and did a full body search (no cavity search though).

    either way, by saying you want an anonymous card is similar to this situation, where you have the option to, but you'll be more suspicious for them to check you out, probably finding stuff about you that they wouldn't have else known.

    1. Re:reason for them to check you out by Dysproxia · · Score: 1

      If you don't give your name when asking for an anonymous card (and there isn't a guy in a darkened room going through the security camera records with face recognition software) your point is moot. Or maybe there is a gang of government thugs hiding under the librarians desk!

    2. Re:reason for them to check you out by forand · · Score: 1

      How is this "Insightful?" The point of the post is to provide a COMPLETELY anonymous method of checking out books from a library. So, yes wanting privacy these days means that you are a suspect, but if they don't know who you are then what does it matter? The librarians are not going to keep track of you by sight.

    3. Re:reason for them to check you out by whathappenedtomonday · · Score: 1
      this is so sick! for fear of raising suspicion, you're supposed to accept all sorts of privacy invasion? yeah, great!

      friend of mine had his nail clipper broken in two by US airport security, because it seemed like an enormously dangerous weapon!. He got back half a nail clipper (without the "blade" that removes dirt from under your nails) and almost cut himself because of the sharp edge the removed part created. d'oh!

      back on topic: by saying you want an anonymous card......you say you want to remain anonymous and not aggregate even more personal/private data, and that's it (or should be).

      --
      I hope I didn't brain my damage.
    4. Re:reason for them to check you out by dwpro · · Score: 4, Insightful
      I agree with your friend's actions, even if they weren't motivated by a desire to protect his privacy. We should not submit to being treated like criminals, even if it makes us look more suspicious.

      In this case it caused him to be treated more like a crook, but if everyone does the there will be no way to keep up with the volume. This is why it is important for everyone who cares about their privacy to stand up for it.

      Most of us don't have anything to hide, we just don't want people prying unneccesarily.

      --
      Millions long for immortality who do not know what to do with themselves on a rainy Sunday afternoon. -- Susan Ertz
    5. Re:reason for them to check you out by KingOfBLASH · · Score: 0

      The guard was probably just trying to be polite. Your friend may have just interpreted a rhetorical question the wrong way. If the guard thought he was mouthing off, why wouldn't he be strip searched? Nothing against your friend, but if he was mouthing off to the guards, would he admit that to you or just say they asked him if he wanted to take his shoes off?

    6. Re:reason for them to check you out by PMuse · · Score: 1

      ...a COMPLETELY anonymous method of checking out books ...

      Buy them for cash. In a city far from where you live.

      (No matter how anonymous the card is, when you return to check out more books later, they can be waiting.)

      --
      "We reject as false the choice between our safety and our ideals." --The American President (20.1.2009)
    7. Re:reason for them to check you out by Jonathan_S · · Score: 1
      (No matter how anonymous the card is, when you return to check out more books later, they can be waiting.)
      Well, they could try to get you returning the books, since that would be a positive link between you and whatever "suspicious" book triggered this response.
      But they'd have to camp out on every branch library 24 hours a day (since I can return a book to any branch either at the counter or using the night book drop).

      Otherwise the most information they could get from pulling the library's records would be that AnonymousCard serial number xyz, security deposit $50, was used to check out something they feel is suspicious.

      Ok, with a live connection to the library's computers they could tell in real time when that card was used to check out new books. But they'd have to have someone on the scene to try to pick me up, so again we're back to stationing an officer in at least the likely branch libraries pretty much full time while they are open.

      Of course, they could try to correlate the checkout against any security camera tapes, to attempt to get a picture and then use that to try to track you down.

      That's getting back into a lot of manpower, which would tend to deter casual searches.

      And if you are really paranoid you could always abandon a card, either temporarily or permanently, and pick up a new anonymous card. Imagine trying to track someone who checked out books once a month, but had 12 different anonymous cards. Rotated in order it would be a year before they reused a card.
    8. Re:reason for them to check you out by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because mouthing off makes him more willing to bring attention to himself, which makes him less likely to be a terrorist. Strip searches are not meant to be punishments. The guards should be more watchful of the people who are unusually compliant.

    9. Re:reason for them to check you out by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This sort of thing has happened to me at the San Juan, Puerto Rico airport twice now.

      The security person will say "it's recommended that you take your shoes off, just in case they set off the metal detector." But since I wore the same pair of shoes through the metal detectors at Hartsfield and they didn't set off the detector, I'll just go through without taking them off. As I pass through the detector, the security guy tells me "you have been selected for a full-body metal detector scan. Or you can go back and take off your shoes."

      What's the freaking point in that airport? The security is so bad that a friend of mine made it to a terminal without going through security by taking an elevator! It's a sham.

      The other thing that gets me is how easy it would be to get on an airplane with someone else's ticket:

      1) Have your friend buy you a ticket in his name
      2) Print out real boarding pass and also a copy that has his name changed to yours
      3) When you go through security, show them the fake copy with your real ID (they're only checking to see that the names are the same)
      4) When you board, give them the real pass. Voila, you're flying as John Smith. You can even fake your ID.

    10. Re:reason for them to check you out by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Or you can live in a country that hasn't become a police state. I've taken flights in Canada and Europe, and I've never been asked to take off my shoes. My city's public library also gives me the option of keeping/not keeping a history of my borrowing habits, so that they only have a list of the material I've checked out and nothing else.

    11. Re:reason for them to check you out by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      [sarcasm]
      Yeah, nothing wrong with getting searched because you mouth-off to some random civil servant.
      [/sarcasm]

      Hello? Unreasonable search and seizure anybody?
      Do we really live in a country where not wanting to take off articles of clothing for some dip-shit with a power complex means you can be dragged off and searched.

    12. Re:reason for them to check you out by TheGratefulNet · · Score: 1

      if we ALL refused to comply, imagine the backlog! having to search EVERYONE who says 'no, I won't take my shoes off for you."

      this would be a non-violent way of protesting this new Bush_State we now live in...

      I wear sandals. and since 9/11, I have not once been able to go thru an airport in the US and NOT had to remove my sandals. sigh...

      ("and if three people did it; I mean, come on, if three people did it, they'd think it was a movement...")

      --

      --
      "It is now safe to switch off your computer."
    13. Re:reason for them to check you out by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, that's pretty stupid. Not only that, but it's easier to chuck it into the waste bin than break it into two and give you half like it's your ticket to Disneyland. I mean, that's what they do with the knives and scissors. I suppose the little file part is more stabbable, which is why they still let you carry your safety razors on for your business trip. While you could still slit someone's wrists with one, you couldn't go and lunge at people with it with any probability of success.

    14. Re:reason for them to check you out by hesiod · · Score: 1

      Posted AC because he's helping the terrorists past the crack Puerto Rican Flight screeners!

  16. bostoncambridge guide to problematical library use by donsaklad · · Score: 0
  17. A good thing by rufty_tufty · · Score: 1

    Seems like a great scheme - as long as the current indentity based method for those without $20 remains. One ponder I have though, assuming this takes off, what happens to these millions of $20s? Do they all get put in a bank and the interest used to buy new books? If so that'd be great as popularity encourages diversity. Or is this as step to commercialising a public service?

    --
    "The weirdest thing about a mind, is that every answer that you find, is the basis of a brand new cliche" -
  18. fund-raising? by moviepig.com · · Score: 1
    Her account balance is temporarily reduced by $15, and when the library checks the CD back in (in good condition), her balance is restored to its original value.

    As anyone who uses their public library can attest, missing items are a common search result. Yet, recovery suits brought by the libraries seem rare. (Litigation may not be in their hearts.)

    This escrow approach not only appeals to one's vengeful dark side, but also smacks of fiscal responsibility. Moreover, posting the actual replacement cost of an item just might extend its shelf-life.

    --
    Seeing bad movies only encourages them. Watch responsibly
  19. Yeah, but by lheal · · Score: 1
    what about Catcher in the Rye? The NSA has statistical GPS-linked tracking systems for that one, you know.

    Now where's my hat? I have to go outside, and you can never be too safe.

    --
    Raise your children as if you were teaching them to raise your grandchildren, because you are.
  20. The bad thing.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful
    The bad thing about this, which the article already discusses, is that this type of card is more useful to those with disposable income; i.e. the poor will not be able to use this service. The author of the article also overstates their case a bit:
    In fact, a homeless person who might otherwise be unable to get a library card could place requests on popular items with a $1 card and then use them within the library when his or her turn comes. So poor people would be no worse off in a library that offers anonymous cash cards.

    The library has no way to contact the homeless person and tell them a book is being held, so the homeless person needs to stop in each day to see if the book has been returned. That's no different than a homeless person currently checking in each day to see if something popular is available for them to read on the premises.


    The big problem with these $1 cards is that someone who doesn't want the public to read a book could buy a bunch of them and say "hold this book for me", then never return to read it. That would prevent the library from loaning the book out to other people so they could read it.

    1. Re:The bad thing.... by vidarh · · Score: 1

      Librarians aren't braindead. I'm sure they'd start noticing a pattern and would be capable of realising that perhaps they should refuse to hold that particular book for people, or only allow a certain percentage of the books to be available for reservation.

  21. for Who? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Privacy for those who can afford it. Isn't America great?

    1. Re:for Who? by rufty_tufty · · Score: 1


      Want to be paranoid? Wait until you can pay for it with your credit card. Now they can track you all they want!
      Remember citizens, only use none sequential used notes to pay for this!

      --
      "The weirdest thing about a mind, is that every answer that you find, is the basis of a brand new cliche" -
  22. Privacy First by JJ · · Score: 4, Informative

    I would say that all librarians are very concerned about privacy issues. My IS degree was thru the graduate library school (so I had to take a few courses there) and the first thing they taught was that what and if somebody reads is that person's business and no one else's. The librarian has an interest in the book (and it being returned promptly) but not in the person or what they do with the book within their allotted time.

    --
    So long and thanks for all the fish . . . !!!
  23. Forget Illinois by benhocking · · Score: 1

    What about in Deming, Washington, where the FBI issued a subpoena for a library to release the names of all people who checked out a biography of Osama bin Laden? (There are reasons for the subpoena - read the story if you aren't familiar with it, but still...)

    This is not an isolated case. There have been numerous cases where the local, state, or federal go vernment has asked for such information.

    I'm not saying this is a valid solution. (Nor am I saying it's an unreasonable solution.) I think the libraries are doing a reasonable job of protecting us against unreasonable searches. I just want to point out that we're not talking about one or two cases, but a repeating pattern.

    --
    Ben Hocking
    Need a professional organizer?
    1. Re:Forget Illinois by geoffspear · · Score: 0, Troll

      But Alberto Gonzales testified that the PATRIOT Act had never been used to try to get information from a library. Are you accusing the Attorney General of committing a federal crime by lying to Congress? I'm shocked... shocked!

      --
      Don't blame me; I'm never given mod points.
    2. Re:Forget Illinois by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      RTFA, dumbass. That request wasn't made under the PATRIOT Act. Despite what idiots like yourself think, such subpoenas were allowed before that law was passed.

  24. Cafés in montreal require ID by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So far, I've been to 4 Internet Cafés in Montreal and every time they take a photocopy of a picture ID and mark down which machine I use. Ok, so I get myself a command line so I can chuckle a little but I have no problem with that really.

    Is it like that in the US?

  25. could worsen book/video acquistions by peter303 · · Score: 1

    When there is a financial crunch, its often the new material acquistions that are cut. (I usually prefer the "new" shelves and notice this.) Anomyomity could make theft easier.
    On the other hand they could institute a stricter "one-strike" policy for anonymous cards. That one be a single overdue or fine temporarily disables the card. Currently, libraries are little more generous than this because it cuts administrative costs and soothes customers.

    1. Re:could worsen book/video acquistions by peter303 · · Score: 1

      As someone else mentioned, one of requirements could be a $50 deposit. That would cover some costs.

    2. Re:could worsen book/video acquistions by vidarh · · Score: 1

      Exactly what part of cash collateral was it you didn't get? If someone steals anything with one of those cards, the collateral is forfeit and the library has a chunk of cash to use on replacing the item. Why exactly would anyone steal a $15 book if they had to put down $15 or more in collateral to check it out with their anonymous card in the first place (possibly significantly more for out of print or rare books if the library has any sense)

  26. I thought of this over a year ago. by rfc1394 · · Score: 1
    How I thought of it was, you went into a library and gave them an amount equal to twice the retail price of whatever book you wanted to borrow. If you brought it back by the due date, you got all your money back; if you brought it back late they deducted the fine. If you brought it back damaged they deducted it from the deposit.

    The book would include the receipt for the deposit, and whoever brought the book back got the refund. As the article noted, you substitute anonymous cash for identity, and you have your choice.

    If they don't collect the information, they can't release it, accidentally or otherwise. That bears repeating. Whatever information they do not collect, they can't leak to others.

    --
    The lessons of history teach us - if they teach us anything - that nobody learns the lessons that history teaches us.
    1. Re:I thought of this over a year ago. by antifoidulus · · Score: 1

      Well then go volunteer at your local library and implement it. And take over all the extra work it will require. It's easy to think of these "brilliant" plans, but not so easy to implement them yourself. Of course it's even easier to give someone you don't know(who may very well be a volunteer) a lot more work.

    2. Re:I thought of this over a year ago. by gmletzkojr · · Score: 1

      My only question/concern regarding this approach is how does the library enforce the damaged book notion? There are some cases that are pretty clear cut - for example, if I spill coffee all over a book, that is definitely my fault, and i should pay up. But what about normal use? Let's say I am the guy that has a book checked out, I open the book, and the binding seperates. I did have the book when it broke, but the other N number of people that had it before me (with thier continuous opening and closing) are the ones contributing to the seperation just as much. I don't think that most people would agree to the 'law of averages' when it comes to this case.

      I'm not saying that the 'deposit' method is wrong, but I can see how enforcement could take a left turn, as determining when a book is 'damaged' can be subjective.

      --
      I for one welcome our new [insert main topic] overlords.
    3. Re:I thought of this over a year ago. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Most libraries don't collect a lot of information on what is borrowed anyway. They keep records on what is currently checked out, but for those exact reasons keep no record of what you used to have checked out. I'm almost done getting my librarian degree, and work part time in a library. A lot of people complain that we can't tell them what they had checked out before, but a lot more are thankful we don't have information to lose.

    4. Re:I thought of this over a year ago. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      jesus GOD if half you halfwits were as smart as you constantly proclaim you'd actually DO something with these fucking brilliant ideas which you apparently just jam back up your own assholes once you've had them

      you did _jack_ _shit_, dickhole. stop trying to steal partial credit from the kids that fucking studied.

  27. Anonymous Cash Cards? by PxM · · Score: 1

    This is somewhat offtopic, but has anyone used any of the anonmyous cash cards mentioned in the blurb? The closest I've seen are gift certificates that can be paid with cash, but they're only good at one store. I've seen online gift certificates that provide a temp debit card (backed by Mastercard) but this requires a credit card to add funds so it's not anonymous. Are there places where I can buy a temp debit card using cash or money orders?

    1. Re:Anonymous Cash Cards? by stinkpad · · Score: 1

      I have always wondered why anyone would exchange cash, which can be used almost anywhere, for a card that is only good at one establishment, when doing so coveys no additional discount... If $97 cash could buy a $100 wal-mart card for example, it might make some sense.... But, if all I get in exchange is $100 cash, (spendable ANYWHERE) for a $100 in merchandise, only good here, I would call them a GIFT CARD FOR THE MENTALLY UNGIFTED. Cash is still the best option for anonimity. If you want to rent a car, motel room, etc. then you should expect the owner of the business to expect a full, verifiable Identification to cover his own ass. I sure as hell would.

    2. Re:Anonymous Cash Cards? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's even worse than that. When you purchase the gift card, they charge you tax. Then when the person you gave it to buys something with it, they charge you tax. So for your $100 Wal-Wart card, you're actually getting $100 - 8.75% (or whatever) = $91.25 worth of merchandise.

  28. "Anonymous" cash cards by HomerJayS · · Score: 2, Insightful
    You've seen anonymous cash cards already; you may even have received them before. They're better known as gift cards

    They're also known as cash, money, coins, etc and predate magnetic stripes on pieces of platic by thousands of years. And they aren't subject to expiration dates and can be used at any retailer.

    1. Re:"Anonymous" cash cards by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Really? Have you ever tried to use a denarius struck in the Empire at the time of Vespasian to buy graphics hardware? The stores don't take Roman denarii anymore.

      Heck, a lot of stores around where I live don't even take euros.

      And I'm pretty sure that neither the denarii nor the euros were expected to have an expiration date.

  29. An Invitation to Theft by Nova+Express · · Score: 0
    Obviously the submitter hasn't read any of the many stories about various libraries around the country being hit for hundreds of thousands of dollars worth of rare book thefts. And that's for libraries with regular checkout and ID procedures. Now you want to hand anyone with $20 in their pocket the chance to steal the most expensive book in the library without any way to trace them merely to assuage your own paranoia?

    --
    Lawrence Person (lawrencepersonh@gmailh.com (remove all "h"s to mail)

    http://www.lawrenceperson.com/

    1. Re:An Invitation to Theft by suman28 · · Score: 1

      ... rare book thefts ...
      If they theft of books is so rare, then what seems to be the problem?

    2. Re:An Invitation to Theft by kebes · · Score: 1

      No, the idea would be that when you check-out a book, the estimated replacement value of the book is taken off of your account. If you put down a small 20$ deposit, then you wouldn't be able to borrow any rare books, or even a textbook, or anything other than a trashy novel, really.

      So I think you misunderstood the concept. The 20$ was only an example. Each person's 'deposit balance' would be different, and would vary as they borrow and return books. Presumably they could close the account at any time and receive the leftover deposit back. Now, this creates alot of extra work for the library staff, who must now carefully value every book, and maintain a database of book values and some sort of accounting check-out system, alongside a more conventional check-out system.

      I think it's not a great idea, since most people don't have the ability to put down a deposit of 200$ in order to borrow a few books, and libraries don't need the extra work (unless, as others have pointed out, they used the interest to help fund the library). The current system seems to work fine (as long as we don't implement any crazy additional privacy invasions, like fingerprints!), so why not just stick with that?

  30. Re:Who will pay for this MARKETING PLOY? by mikelieman · · Score: 1

    Apparently, IIRC the town happens to be the home of the MAKER of the fingerprint scanners.

    Seems to me that this is nothing but a Vendor looking for some FREE BUZZ.

    Of course, if what you vend is EVIL....

    --
    Technology -- No Place For Wimps! Grateful Dead and Jerry Garcia Chatroom -- http://www.wemissjerry.org
  31. Wait for cross checks by DHS by NoSuchGuy · · Score: 1

    DHS want's to check which person read "The Terror State" or "The Nuclear Bombs Howto":

    1) Check when book was lent
    2) Check which account was charged
    3) check when book was checked in again
    4) check which account is changed.

    It's only some SQL statements and then you have an account/number/name/person.

    In the USA there is NO anonymous reading/living/driving/renting anywhere because terrorist are everywhere! (and to protect the children!)

    The USA are not any more "The Land of The Free".

    --
    Grundgesetz * 23. Mai 1949 - 30. November 2007 - http://www.vorratsdatenspeicherung.de/
  32. Some reasons I do not like this by mzs · · Score: 3, Informative

    First of all, the 'value' of the material you check-out should be increased from the purchase price. I regularly use inter library loan to get materials that are next to impossible to find otherwise. If this system was anonymous and the price of CD say was $15, then all of the obscure music would quickly vanish from circulation. You would need to increase the value to say $60 to discourage stealing.

    The way that libraries counteract stealing now is that they have a dollar limit above which they do not lend further materials out to you and you can only have one library card per name address pair. So even if the value is comparable to real world cost, the fact that you can only steal a limited amount before you can return to steal more, and the fact that if you steal enough at one time they will put you in collection work well enough to prevent casual theft.

    Already at that increased value rate for the card, this would turn-away most people. But say that they did not mark-up the value, just wait until you have three kids like I do. Right now I have some twenty odd books/videos/CDs checked-out from the library near my home. I also have two movies, two books, and 11 CDs that I am returning today to the library near my work. I do not even know how much my wife has checked-out, but she is a pretty voracious reader too. Think about how much money we would need to set aside for that.

    So why is this being proposed? It looks like it is a solution to the wrong end of the problem. The real problem are the laws that force libraries to turn-over information. So guess what the solution is? Yes that's right, change those laws.

    1. Re:Some reasons I do not like this by geoffspear · · Score: 1
      Sadly, the American Library Association was powerful enough to get 48 states to ban all libraries from turning over circulation to anyone without a subpoena, but will never be powerful enough to keep these provisions in the PATRIOT Act from being renewed indefinitely.

      Fortunately, no reputable library software links checked out materials to the patrons who checked them out once the materials are returned, and you can't force a library to reveal information they don't have. Of course, it probably won't be long before libraries are required to keep that information forever, "just in case it's needed to stop a terrorist attack".

      --
      Don't blame me; I'm never given mod points.
    2. Re:Some reasons I do not like this by vidarh · · Score: 1
      For most people this isn't needed. For those who considers it a valuable alternative, the extra cost may not be something they consider a hindrance.

      The problem with changing laws to prevent data from being handed over is that there's nothing preventing laws like that from being changed right back, and unless data being collected in the meantime immediately gets deleted, that's exactly the kind of situation you'd want to avoid - imagine another 9/11 style attack and a government reacting in panic forcing through more emergency legislation and deciding a crackdown on dissidents is an acceptable cost (or even a rogue agency taking matters in their own hands - it's not like the CIA and assorted other US agencies haven't demonstrated plenty of willingness to break laws in the past).

      Just someone having the data may be a chilling effect for some.

    3. Re:Some reasons I do not like this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because people who want to check out materials anonymously are nutcases who are happy to put up with only being able to check out $20 or $40 or whatever worth of material at a time (and usually happen to have the disposable income to indulge their anonymity)? After all, why check out everything on the same anonymous card, when surely it would be better to check each item out on a different anonymous card. That way, if you're reading a book on the World Trade Centers and on the Boeing 767 for unrelated reasons, the Feds don't stake out the library so they can hunt you down with a dull razor. Face it, poor people already have no rights in this country with Junior in charge (OK, gratuitous shot, it's not exactly a new state of affairs, but boy, talk about silver spoon boy). Just look at the faces on death row--mostly that percentage of the population that can't afford celebrity defense lawyers.

      I think most people are going to be fine with a normal library card. Sure, maybe the Feds can read your reading list, but if you're reading dull-as-dirt stuff, they're not likely to be interested. Future terrorists will probably go out of their way to check out dull books from the library, while just buying, stealing, or smuggling in any suspect materials. (And really, since when do sleeper agents need to check out books from a U.S. public library to plot their nefarious deeds?)

      And I for one would relish the opportunity to take a case up to the Supremes and kick these stupid laws around. I'm a U.S. citizen, so they can't deport me, although they can go to extralegal measures like throw you in a Navy brig and deny you due process. But in the end, it's going to come around and bite them in the ass, wait and see. The only sad thing is that it's not going to be soon enough to bite the current pols in office in the ass. I forecast at least another 4 years of Republican domination of all the branches of government. Not that the current group of Democratic congress critters are showing much leadership in the opposite direction, either. This country is going to be in a fine kettle of fish when we finally start to turn things around. Although I'm confident we will. The fall of the American empire isn't due for another half century minimum, methinks.

  33. Don't take it personal by Scrameustache · · Score: 2, Insightful

    And may I ask, how do you know that I don't contribute to Wiki? Because as a matter of fact I do. [...] Why don't you stop making assumptions (because you know what they say about assumptions) and take a reality check.

    I'm not making assumptions, I just don't respect the "get your priorities straight / think of the children" posts (your post being an independant entity from you, btw) because they never contribute anything to the discussion. Off course there are other problems in life, more pressing, more life threatning, etc.

    If you're going to say there are more pressing matters to this thread, why not write a macro that'll post the exact same thing to every. single. thread. up until such times as hunger, war and disease have been wiped out from the world? Might as well.

    --

    You can't take the sky from me...

    1. Re:Don't take it personal by Council · · Score: 1

      I agree with you in general, but keep in mind that there's a difference between "X and Y are larger problems, let's focus on them first," (e.g. 'how can you buy DVDs with children starving in Africa!?') and "It's not worth the effort to focus on this problem, period (so let's focus on X and Y)," which I think is more this situation -- that is, a solution in search of a problem.

      --
      xkcd.com - a webcomic of mathematics, love, and language.
  34. Out of Print by revtom · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Let's say libraries had the resources to implement this. There is no replacing an out-of-print book, even if it originally cost less that the deposit amount.

    --
    -- We live in a kakistocracy.
    1. Re:Out of Print by djmurdoch · · Score: 1

      How is this different from lending with regular ID? If you borrow an irreplaceable item and lose it, you'll be charged something (maybe $50), but the library won't get the item back.

    2. Re:Out of Print by revtom · · Score: 1

      At least, in the current system, the library might be able to contact you in case you just forgot to return it. I've returned items after a library contact because I forgot I still had them.

      I agree it's not much different, but there is a slightly better chance of return with the current system.

      --
      -- We live in a kakistocracy.
  35. The Star Trek Connection by woodsrunner · · Score: 1

    Yeah, you know the Star Trek readers are definitely being watched.

    http://www.macleans.ca/topstories/justice/article. jsp?content=20050530_106573_106573

    And this is the really scary part of library record snooping -- not the ones who are looking at people who check out The Anarchist's cookbook, but doing searches and serveillance for more casual connections -- hunting down trekkies because they might be pedophiles. -- Hunting down people who read american history because they might be "too patriotic" -- where does it end!?

  36. Use the resources without signing them out by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    At the libraries here you can use the resources without signing them out. Want to look at that naughty book and not let people know about it. Just take it off the shelf and read it in the library. Even less conspicuous than signing it out anonymously. You don't even need a library card to that. Want to visit naughty sites on the internet, use their computers, or if you are truly paranoid, use your one. By law we can't filter internet access in libraries in Canada.

    FWIW, I work in the educational and library system so I deal with this. To keep the Windows computers free of crap we use DeepFreeze, no porno popups for us.

    I realize that not all places likely have the same laws as us, but not everywhere has this big brother problem, and for that I am thankfull.

  37. The conflict between privacy and money by saterdaies · · Score: 1

    This is a perfect example of what no one talks about. That it costs more if you aren't going to identify yourself. People have bashed hotel places because they want your info, but if they don't have it, they would need to raise their insurance to cover you skipping on the bill or damaging the place and leaving. The fact is that most people would prefer to fork over their info rather than pay more money.

    Maybe we should just be making our society more accessible to people with different preferences. Of course, once you allow people to do these things without sharing their info, they're going to protest the price.

  38. So... how much to not scan my luggage? by Bud · · Score: 2, Funny

    If a privacy-minded user deposits $20 to get an anonymous library card, she can check out The Terror State without identifying herself. Her account balance is temporarily reduced by $15, and when the library checks the CD back in (in good condition), her balance is restored to its original value.

    Borrowing The Terror State from your local library: $20

    Parking your car anywhere: $50

    Fast lane at the airport, bypassing extra security checks: $100k

    Bypassing all important security checks: $10m

    Bypassing all security checks and paying for it with American oil money: priceless.

    --Bud

  39. Charge per book? by nurb432 · · Score: 1

    thats not how it works here. We already paid for the book via taxes. There is no 'rental fee' when you check out books.

    There is a fine if you bring it back late of course.. That could be deducted from the card.

    But turning a library into a book rental shop isnt a good idea at all. would be bad for both tax payers and the low income types..

    --
    ---- Booth was a patriot ----
  40. Why this is a bad idea by Brian+Stretch · · Score: 0, Troll

    Maybe this article will prove enlightening. One of the more interesting quotes:

    The Pakistani-born, Queens-reared Babar frequented the New York Public Library (NYPL). As Deputy Attorney General James Comey told the Senate Judiciary Committee September 22: "We found out after we locked this guy up that he was going there because that library's hard drives were scrubbed after each user was done, and he was using that library to e-mail other al-Qaeda associates around the world. He knew that that was a sanctuary."

    Most of the only time knowing what the bad guys did at a library is only helpful after the fact, but that can help a lot. Creating all these anonymizing systems in libraries is attracting the people that the government is rightly worried about. Is it really bright for governmental organizations (like public libraries) to expend the extra effort to do that?

    Let's see how long it takes for this to get modded down to "-1, Troll".

    1. Re:Why this is a bad idea by the+eric+conspiracy · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Most of the only time knowing what the bad guys did at a library is only helpful after the fact, but that can help a lot.

      All of this is based on the theory that government is honest, never makes mistakes and always lives up to the principles laid out in the Constitution by our founding fathers.

      The truth falls well short of this - during my lifetime there have been multple large scale abuses of power by the federal govenerment - and I think history will show the Patriot Act to fall into that category.

      And pray, tell me WHY reading a book, no matter how inflamartory should make one bit of difference in a criminal context? This is surely only a back door towards eroding some of our most basic freedoms - of speech and the press.

      What next, are we going to record how individuals voted in the elections? Surely, if you vote for a Muslim candidate that must mean you have terrorist leanings, right? And don't laugh - people lost everything during the McCarthy era simply because they associated with somebody who belonged to the wrong political party. Look at the case of Robert Oppenhiemer.

      We live in an era where there have been many proposals by agents of the goverment to establish centralized databases full of data characterizing the actions and behaviors of citizens without any restraint on who gets cataloged. There is a bill before Congress right now that would mandate a national id card.

      Can you imagine how data of that nature would have been misused by the likes of McCarthy and Nixon?

      No, rather than this incessant data gathering and spying that seems to be the idea of moment (and in reality it signals victory by the terrorists who want to destroy our way of life) we should be working to STRENGTHEN the erosions of privacy that are occurring in the digital age.

      Anonymous library cards are a WONDERFUL idea.

    2. Re:Why this is a bad idea by mikael · · Score: 1

      How ironic that a cost-saving method such as a "ram-disk" should now be considered a terrorist weapon.

      10 years ago, having a RAM-disk on your PC was considered a good way of extending the life of your hard disk drive.

      Our library was desperate to prevent the spread of boot viruses, and managed to find a way of making the hard-drives of publicly accessible PC's read only, and all user data downloaded from 'ftp' or 'gopher' could only be downloaded onto the ramdisk or floppy drive. As soon as the user went back to the applications menu, the ramdisk would be reinitialised.

      --
      Vintage computer adverts: http://www.vintageadbrowser.com/computers-and-software-ads
    3. Re:Why this is a bad idea by vidarh · · Score: 1
      Most internet cafe's I know wipe the harddrives clean between each user. One of the major chains in the UK, for instance, runs a completely automated system that overwrite the harddrive with a fresh image each time someone logs in.

      That's not considered "extra effort". That's considered essential to ensure users identities, password details, credit card numbers and other stuff isn't stolen, and to ensure people don't leave illegal material all over the place.

      Considering that any user that were conscious about security could clean up after themselves anyway if they had to, unless the operator of the terminals takes extra effort to carry out surveillance (key loggers, logging network traffic etc.), this is a pointless discussion unless you're suggesting active surveillance of all internet users is a good thing (in which case you're a lost cause).

    4. Re:Why this is a bad idea by Brian+Stretch · · Score: 1

      And don't laugh - people lost everything during the McCarthy era simply because they associated with somebody who belonged to the wrong political party.

      I'm going to let Jonah Goldberg take this one:

      Senator Joe McCarthy was a lout, generally speaking. But he was on the right side of history and, in a broad sense, of morality as well. If, in some sort of parallel-universe exercise, the same number of (now proven) Soviet-Communist spies, collaborators, sympathizers, and the like were somehow switched to Nazis, and McCarthy went after them with the same vehemence as he went after Reds, Joe McCarthy might well have universities and foundations named after him today. Just imagine if a ring of Nazi party members were found to be working in Hollywood, never mind the State Department, taking money from Berlin to advance the Nazi cause. Does anyone really think "McCarthyism" would still be denounced as an unmitigated evil, often put at the front of the parade of horribles alongside Hitlerism and Stalinism?

      I suppose my problem isn't with privacy efforts per se: if you have a legitimate technical reason, as other replies have discussed, that's fine and wonderful. Maybe the results would be the same either way. But it sickens me to see so many people apparently motivated by the thought of protecting terrorists, acting more afraid of Bush and Ashcroft and bogeymen-du-jour than of the people who thought it bright to drive airplanes into buildings. Sometimes we have to pick the least bad option.

    5. Re:Why this is a bad idea by Otto · · Score: 1

      Sometimes we have to pick the least bad option.

      I agree 100%. The least bad option, in this case, is to protect both the bad people and the good people.

      If the price for preventing terrorism is taking away our freedom, then the price is too high.

      --
      - Give a man a fire and he's warm for a day, but set him on fire and he's warm for the rest of his life.
    6. Re:Why this is a bad idea by ccady · · Score: 1

      1) So? In order to listen to a person's phone conversations, we require a court-ordered phone tap. I think that in order to find out a person's browsing habits on a computer, we should need a court-ordered "computer tap."

      2) At the same time that you are creating an "anonymizing system," you are letting go of a "tracking system." The libraries are already expending extra effort keeping track of people and books. They could be expending less effort with an anonymous system.

      --
      J'aime mieux les méchants que les imbéciles, parce qu'ils se reposent. -- Alexandre Dumas
    7. Re:Why this is a bad idea by the+eric+conspiracy · · Score: 1

      Senator Joe McCarthy was a lout, generally speaking. But he was on the right side of history and, in a broad sense, of morality as well.

      Ridiculous on the face of it. McCarthy did reveal some spies in government - but purely by accident. In his paranoid world all of the American people were guilty until proven innocent, and association was enough to prove treason. His net was so wide that it would have been impossible to not catch a fish or two.

      The problem is the many innocent people his 'investigations' destroyed. In our society this sort of collateral damage is unacceptable. McCarthy was not on a moral high ground - rather he was in the gutter, using the lowest of human emotions and principles to further a reign of terror.

      If the errors of the early stages of the Cold War are not acknowledged now, they will be repeated. The history of the 1950s is a must-read today. The first lesson is clear: within America, freedom must be defended vigorously for there will always be people looking to erode it in the name of security.

      The most secure society is one where there are no personal freedoms and everthing not compulsory is forbidden.

      The idea that anonymous library cards is a threat to our nation or protects terrorists is absurd on the face of it. The far greater danger comes from laws like the Patriot Act that implicitly hand victory to the same terrorists.

  41. I Paid Already by Bipedismaximus · · Score: 1

    I, as a tax paying citizen, have already paid as much as I should have to in order to use my public library anyway I want (as long as my use does not dirupt the rights of other tax paying citizens to use the library as well of course).

    --
    The way to a man's heart is through the left ventricle
    1. Re:I Paid Already by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      so ?

      Hand over your information so I can verify you are a tax paying resident of the state and I'll gladly let you use the library how ever you want.

      However, if you want to remain anonymous because of the raids on libraries by the government to determine who is commiting thought crimes, you need to givce me cash to replace the book. I don't care to contact you about the late book, I just need cash to replace it.

      You seem to be missing the point, hence your post in only a 1, and not a +5 insightful.

  42. do you think to solve the trackable ID problem.. by BigGerman · · Score: 1

    .. for good, all we need to do is peer-to-peer distributed solution?
    A card that can hold unique id and your public/private key pair and a ubiquos cheap device everywhere allowing to "mate" any two cards and sign (transfer bit of trust) from one card to another?
    Plus a Congress mandate NOT to store any identifiable info next the the card number and just permitting storing trust relationships?
    Seems an ID card like that will satisfy needs of anyone: contr-terrorism agencies (person buying the plane ticket will be more scrutinized if his trust level low/non-existent), credit agencies (trustworthy people are good with money), etc.

  43. A Matter Of Freedom by jglen490 · · Score: 1
    To the extent that access to the free interchange of ideas is impeded, our very freedom as a people are impeded. When it becomes a little more difficult to gain access to a library, or it costs a little more upfront, or additional personal information is required as a condition of such access, we become less of a free society.

    Maybe it's only a little bit of info, or maybe the request comes with a "trust me", but still each little bit soon adds up to a lot.

    To the extent that we agree to each little restriction, we give in to the demands of those who don't agree with our freedom.

  44. what a great idea by matt+me · · Score: 1

    now i can borrow "the picture guide to making dirty bombs by naked chicks" without being arrested!

  45. Used book shop by famebait · · Score: 1

    But how much should the deposit be on a cheap but out-of print book, to avoid the library becoming effectively a used book shop with a really nice selection?

    Sure, you can abuse the old system like that too (just pay the fine and keep the book), but the psychology of it is sure to be more tempting when they have no way of finding you (even if they proabably wouldn't bother in any case).

    --
    sudo ergo sum
  46. I can't learn my history... by aug24 · · Score: 3, Insightful
    ...I can't afford a library card.

    But seriously, are you suggesting we should have universal anonymity with universal trust? You must be mad. Did you follow the 'white bicycle' and 'green bicycle' experiments?

    Anyway, the 'rich' (in this case those with 20 bucks to spare) only get to be anonymous by forfeiting access to some of their money.

    You might as well complain that parking schemes are only for the benefit of those who can afford a car.

    Justin.

    --
    You're only jealous cos the little penguins are talking to me.
    1. Re:I can't learn my history... by cudaboy_71 · · Score: 1

      got a reference to the 'white bicycle/green bicycle' experiments? i'm not familiar. my googlefoo only pulls up http://not-included.net/comics.php?id=18 this random link.

      --
      if it ain't broke, break it.
    2. Re:I can't learn my history... by aug24 · · Score: 1

      Amsterdam and Cambridge (UK), respectively, bought lots and lots of bicycles for everyone to use for free. Just use 'em, and then leave 'em for the next guy. They were all stolen. Anonymous access to facilities is always abused.

      J.

      --
      You're only jealous cos the little penguins are talking to me.
  47. Re:Obvious flaw in the idea by deimtee · · Score: 1

    They don't HAVE the identity. The book was borrowed by Mr $20.
    I would assume that anyone who turns up with the book and card could collect the money too.

    --
    I'm guessing that wasn't on their radar screen...
  48. I think it's a great idea by farker+haiku · · Score: 1

    Frankly, I think that libraries are grossly underfunded, and while $.16 on $20 isn't a big loss for a single borrower, it's a huge gain when you think about the thousands of people who are likely to use this anonymous feature. I'm ok with giving the library some additional funding for them to protect my right to privacy.

    --
    Your sig(k) has been stolen. There is a puff of smoke!
  49. This system exists at Barnes & Noble by woodsrunner · · Score: 1

    The anonymous card is called your reciept. You pay cash, return the book within a month and you get your money back.

    Public Libraries should be free for everyone. It is only a short period where there was any sense of anonimity in the Library. When I was a kid, we had to sign our names on the cards which was public for anyone to see. I made a lot of friends just because we knew we checked out the same sort of books.

    1. Re:This system exists at Barnes & Noble by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      B&N requires you to show a drivers license, so unless you look like a little kid they're going to 1. know who you are and 2. stop refunding your $ when your name constantly appears in the refund system.

    2. Re:This system exists at Barnes & Noble by woodsrunner · · Score: 1



      There are a lot of Barnes and Nobles around, go to another one that isn't so agonistic -- or try Chapters, or Borders.

      They never asked me for ID and I've borrowed loads of books from them. I keep a lot too, but I don't see much point in keeping a $70 book that sucks. And I don't like being in databases if I can avoid it. Last summer I was returning a book or two a month because I was burning through a lot of new territory and never was required to give ID -- as long as you have a receipt and the book is in good enough shape to resell and you don't look like a homeless pirate I don't think they care. They have asked me for my name and phone number, but never demanded ID. I have even been given refund on a Red Hat book because I told them the CD's wouldn't install on my computer. They aren't supposed to take opened media, you're supposed to mail it back to the publisher.

      The thing is, if you are nice and polite, people are usually quite helpful. Most people who work at those places don't make enough money to care. Most people who shop at these places make too much money to treat store clerks like people. A little charity can go a long way.

      Or if your really worried, to get a library card most only require a piece of mail and no ID card. But most public libraries have sorry tech sections.

      Of course the real anti-socials would just steal the Anarchists Cookbook so really, these lists are pretty pointless.

  50. Why not a "him"? by tbcpp · · Score: 1

    What if the person in question was a him instead of a her. It bugs me how some people have to be so politicaly correct sometimes... Okay, give me a point for being off-topic now...

    --
    Man is the lowest-cost, 150-pound, nonlinear, all-purpose computer system which can be mass-produced by unskilled labor.
  51. not high enough and too high already by PMuse · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I would only think this would work if the deposit was much higher.. but of course then no one would use it.

    Elite Level: For a fee large enough that only rich people (and well-funded cells) will pay it, you can have a library card not traceable to you (until you show up to use it again).

    Comrade Level: For free-as-in-police-state, you can have a library card that logs every transaction you make. (Future upgrades will upload the logs directly to DCS1000.)

    The surveillance situation in this country is just wrong and it keeps getting wronger(TM), but look where this solution leads us: two classes of access. The principle of libraries is that free public access to information improves society. Free -- not paid, not surveilled -- free.

    --
    "We reject as false the choice between our safety and our ideals." --The American President (20.1.2009)
    1. Re:not high enough and too high already by SilverJets · · Score: 1

      I honestly don't think many people are understanding this whole thing. PMUse got it...and I will add a little extra in hopes the rest of you understand too.

      Read this passage, copied directly from the article
      Unfortunately, if an over-zealous special agent on a fishing expedition wants to know who checked out Anti-Flag's album The Terror State yesterday, the librarian will probably have little choice. Under the USA PATRIOT Act, he or she would have to surrender the personal identity information that was originally collected to protect the library's materials.

      Ok? Now...go back a read it again.

      The fundamental problem here is not the libraries, and not the patrons of the libraries. The fundamental problem is that rights an freedoms are being abused and stripped away. Why should you have to even worry about whether or not your "reading history" at your local library will be investigated? What kind of a country do you live in where this would even have to be taken into consideration? Is this the former Soviet Union? Or is this the United States of America?

    2. Re:not high enough and too high already by TapeCutter · · Score: 1

      Umm... that's only half the point, here is the other half, starting from where you stopped...

      "Local politicians and celebrities can also be the targets of information theft. Opponents in an election would love to expose possibly unethical behavior by the incumbent: fees that were waived as a courtesy, fines accrued for overdue items, or controversial books that he or she borrowed......In short, collecting personal identity information about customers is a dangerous activity for a library. We should be careful to engage in it only when absolutely necessary."

      Politically smart to use the incumbent as the victim, but that is to be expected when looking at a magazine aimed at librarians.

      I agree with the sentiments of your last paragraph and that is why I think it is a GOOD idea.

      --
      And did you exchange a walk on part in the war for a lead role in a cage? - Pink Floyd.
  52. When does the library see the money? by sonsonete · · Score: 1

    So when does the library see the money, if the book is returned on time and in good condition? People pay to use libraries through their taxes; it's not a free service. If you can get these cards and have all transactions be free, then there is no money going to the library to pay for staffing, purchasing the books, etc.

    One could, perhaps, work out a system where you are refunded the cost of the book, minus a small processing fee for each transaction. Since people usually don't realize that they are paying to use the library already, this would probably be widely unpopular; but it would be necessary to keep the library afloat.

    --
    "Folks bent on reinventing the wheel should understand that if it's not round, it ain't a wheel." - Jonah Goldberg
    1. Re:When does the library see the money? by vidarh · · Score: 1
      You entirely miss the point. This isn't a funding mechanism. The point is that personal details on current library cards are there to ease recovery of the books, and to be able to fine you in the event the book is unrecoverable.

      If there is cash collateral tied to your library card, then that need isn't there anymore except for rare books that can't reasonably be replaced.

      The cost of operating the library is an entirely separate issue, and one of the points of having free libraries is exactly to ensure the availability of books for everyone.

  53. Completly oftoppic ... but anyway ... by Frit+Mock · · Score: 1


    I know this will be completly offtopic, but I must tell a large audience this breaking news ...
    (I have never heard of something similar before and I think this one is worth a slashdot storry of its own. Hopefully this news makes its way on top of slashdot.)

    You probably aware that in Germany there will be elections for a new government in Speptember.

    The political party "Bündnis 90/Die Grünen" now opened part of their election manifesto to the public ... surprisingly as a Wiki for everyone to take part in the discussion and rewrite this part of their manifesto.
    "Bündnis 90/Die Grünen" are one party of the current German government, maybe you know the german foreign minister/Secretary of State
    "Joshka Fisher", he's a member of this party.

    The topic of the part modifyable is "Digital Society" and is exactly what the parties - better say the *public* position ;) - position about what one would expect from the topic ... right to access information on the net, privacy, software-patents, open-source, RFID, open source software and so on.

    Everyone is invited to contribute to their manifesto (seriously, no joke!) and the *collective* opinion about this topic will be the basis for the members to decide about their final political manifesto.

    The URL of the page is:
    http://www.gruene-service.de/wiki/index.php?title= Original-Textentwurf

    Everything is in German, but you wouldn't expect a different language, right?

    And here's a link to an interview in "Spiegel Online" , a well known german news-magazine. (Sorry, that I can't provide you a translation of the article.)

    That's a pretty nice example/test balloon how democracy should/could look like in the 21st century!

  54. Netflix for books by Ratbert42 · · Score: 1

    We need Netflix for books. I'd use it. Heck, I'd probably buy (keep) a lot of them.

    1. Re:Netflix for books by mikeytwice · · Score: 1

      I've hoped for the same thing myself. I imagine the problem would be the more substantial shipping costs.

  55. Gonzales and the PATRIOT Act by benhocking · · Score: 1

    Actually, he said "The department has no interest in rummaging through the library records or the medical records of Americans." And, as far as I know, the PATRIOT Act has not yet been used to try to get information from a library. (Key word is "yet", but correct me if I'm wrong.) I'm not supporting the PATRIOT Act, and in fact I think the name is quite the misnomer, but let's not muddy the waters with false claims. If these are not false claims, please correct me. (All I've read so far is about the possibility of using the PATRIOT Act to get library records.)

    --
    Ben Hocking
    Need a professional organizer?
    1. Re:Gonzales and the PATRIOT Act by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's illegal for a library to tell anyone, even a lawyer, so we'll just have to trust the government on this.

  56. Cool! by Dracolytch · · Score: 1

    A bookstore with the most flexible return policy ever! I'm in!

    ~D

    --
    This sig has been enciphered with a one-time pad. It could say almost anything.
  57. privacy vs anonymity by dlefavor · · Score: 1

    Since when does privacy equate to anonymity? I have every right to demand to know who you are if you want to engage in a transaction with me, and you have every right to retreat from the transaction if you don't want to identify yourself. Your right to privacy extends to me in our transaction only to the extent that I may agree to conceal your identity from others in accordance with a clearly articulated policy - or by explicit or implied contract. You have no right to anonymity. You have a right to privacy. If you think the only way to preserve your privacy is to hide behind anonymity, your cynicism exceeds your grasp of reality.

    1. Re:privacy vs anonymity by Lord+Bitman · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Except that if you check out a book non-anonymously, you have no right to privacy beyond the transaction. The government can see that you're checking out perfectly legal books from a public library and use it to build a case* to arrest or further invade you. The government has so far not said "The library must keep track of this information", it has only said "The library must turn over what information it keeps track of". So, yes, in this case anonymity is the only way to preserve your privacy.

      *"OMFG NOBODY IS BEING ARRESTED FOR CHECKING OUT A BOOK U MORON" == irrelevent, not actually related to what I said. Beware of magic qualifying words: they need to be read for the sentence to work.

      --
      -- 'The' Lord and Master Bitman On High, Master Of All
    2. Re:privacy vs anonymity by vidarh · · Score: 1
      It's certainly not the only way to preserve privacy.

      But anonymous access to information is important, because historically the suppression of the unfettered exchange of information has been one of the most important tools for oppressive governments to prevent dissent.

      Even if you make the assumption that no future government are going to make use of the ability to track you, there are also other privacy issues, such as your ability to protect your privacy against the press or against groups opposed to your lifestyle or views, and a wide range of others.

      There are plenty of groups in todays society that have very real reasons to be worried about situations like that given the number of hate crimes and past incidents where the ease of availability of personal information have allowed hate groups to target individuals.

    3. Re:privacy vs anonymity by dlefavor · · Score: 1

      The government can see that you're checking out perfectly legal books from a public library and use it to build a case* to arrest or further invade you.

      Paranoia runs deep.

      If you must be anonymous, you are going to forfeit certain privileges, in the public as well as private domain.

      Public libraries have a valid government interest in knowing who has a particular book. It's not just a matter of money, it's a matter of preserving the collection. If it's such a concern that government knows that you once had some particular title, have the libraries destroy check-out history of their books once they're returned.

      Anonymity is not the only answer to privacy, any more than it's never appropriate.

    4. Re:privacy vs anonymity by Lord+Bitman · · Score: 1

      the difference here seems to be one of us is grouping "Library" and "The Government" into one entity, while the other is not.

      --
      -- 'The' Lord and Master Bitman On High, Master Of All
    5. Re:privacy vs anonymity by The+Cisco+Kid · · Score: 1

      No one wants to force libraries to do anything.

      The libraries arent demanding to know who is borrowing their items. They only want to ensure they get them back (or with this scenario, that their cost to replace them would be covered if they didnt get them back)

      Librarians dont like that the government is forcing them to provide access to the identity information that they have typically collected *only* to protect the safe return of their books, and this person is offering this idea to libraries that might choose to implement it.

      If a library didnt want to use this idea, no one would force them to. However I think the goals of the author will appeal to libraries and librarians.

      As far as your right to demand identity, sure, you have that right. But if you were holding a garage sale, and were selling a used pair of pants for $2, would you refuse to accept cash and only accept credit cards or checks, so you can know the buyers identity?

      The point here is that all the library wants is a form of collateral on the items being borrowed, and that an (anonmyous) cash deposit might be a suitable way of doing that, rather than the current/only method of requring that every borrower proove their identity.

    6. Re:privacy vs anonymity by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Excuse the AC, but being a /. n00b I just have to know:

      "The government can see that you're checking out perfectly legal books from a public library and use it to build a case* to arrest or further invade you."

      OK, that's a given, and I agree. However, just because the government "CAN" build a case against me, why WOULD they? Aside from the difficulty of building a case against me (I'm no altar-boy, but I haven't exactly murdered my wife either....), why would they spend the money to?

      Admittedly, perhaps your argument lies on the fact that there are those out there who the government dosen't like (and thus would be willing to spend the money) regardless of their being innocent of crimes. However, the problem lies NOT in that the government can gain access to our information, but in that the courts aren't perfect (and can be pressured by government to allow arrests and imprisonment).

      As I see it, busting out anonymity isn't the cure for the problem -- it's only a band-aid. If you want the government to stop arresting people they don't like, make it so that the courts can't allow it. Make the courts hold up to justice, so that those who are innocent don't have to suffer because they're being a "problem". Perhpas it's impossible (perhaps not), but ideally the courts should be reformed, not anonymity.

    7. Re:privacy vs anonymity by The+Cisco+Kid · · Score: 1

      "Preserving a collection" - If an item in the collection is irreplacable (say 200 year old out of print books), then I doubt they would be allowed to be checked out under this system or would have a 'checkout' value of 'infinite'). But for books still 'inprint', which could be replaced, by purchasing a new copy for some known amount (perhaps pad for the possibility of the price going up), it makes sense.

      The library does *NOT* have an interest (especially a governmental one, since libraries arent the government) in knowing *who* has a particular item, *except* for the need to ensure that it will be returned or that it can be replaced. The *only* reason libraries (currently) need your ID is so that they can track you down if you dont return items, to demand the return of the items, or if they were lost/damaged/etc, that you (!) pay the replacement cost. Having a cash deposit system where the required deposit would be the amount determined by the library that would be required to replace the item, would give the library the same protection, becuase they'd already *have* the replacement cost, they wouldnt need to worry about who you were or take the time or expense to track you down. Perhaps some sort of time limit on returns would go along with that, and after that time you'd be out your deposit (and be considered to have bought the item), and the library would buy a new one. For an illustration, look at the way college bookstores work - only they give you only a small fraction of what you pay when you bring it back - usually becuase you have the book for quite a bit longer than most libraries allow checkouts for, the books are subject to much ear (hiliting, etc), and becuase they are in it for the money. (Libraries are in it for the 'civic good' or whatever you want to consider it, and only collect fees/fines to cover their costs)

      Note, the story author isnt talking about forcing this on libraries, he is talking about making it *available* to those libraries that might want to implement it, thereby allowing the privilege anonymous checkouts to their patronage who might be concerned about it (wether you feel thats a legitimate concern or not). Read the byline - he is a librarian himself.

      If libraries implement this (and I suspect at least some will), then someone desiring to remain anonymous will not be required to forfeit the privilege of checking out books from those libraries.

    8. Re:privacy vs anonymity by Lord+Bitman · · Score: 1

      Yes, that's exactly what it is. A way of getting around the law until it is changed. This is not a permanent solution, it's a way of saying "fuck you!" to delay whatever will happen.

      --
      -- 'The' Lord and Master Bitman On High, Master Of All
  58. What if Someone Steals Your Card? by gmletzkojr · · Score: 1

    In this case, what happens if someone steals ('borrows') your card, and doesn't return the books? You are out the $$ for the books. Under the current system, if someone 'borrows' your card, and doesn't return the books, it is actually a legal case. Please be aware that I am not for loss of privacy, but I think there needs to be a happy medium here.

    A friend of mine (We can call her Hot Girl 1, or HG1) had her library identity stolen, by a former friend (we'll call her Unknown Girl 1, UG1). So, UG1 takes HG1's card, gets some books, and never returns them. HG1 tries to get books months later. Library tells HG1 she can't check out books, b/c she has $200 in overdue charges. HG1 realizes UG1 took out the books. HG1 is told by the library to call police and file a complaint. Police tell HG1 that UG1 is going to be arrested for pretending to be HG1.

    Now, wouldn't this all have been easier if library required maybe a photo on the card? Then, library could verify the person getting the books.

    --
    I for one welcome our new [insert main topic] overlords.
    1. Re:What if Someone Steals Your Card? by vidarh · · Score: 2, Insightful
      How would walking around with an anonymous library card with cash collateral tied to it be any different from walking around with (anonymous) cash?

      Some people prefer not to, and get a card with features that reduces their potential loss at the cost of it being possible to trace transactions, and other prefer to walk around with anything from a few small bills to large wads of high denomination bills.

      Why does it have to be either/or?

    2. Re:What if Someone Steals Your Card? by gmletzkojr · · Score: 1

      I would have to say that anonymous library card and cash are basically the same, except for the obvious difference of one only working at the appropriate library.

      Now, if you have a card with features to reduce potenial loss, you are 'giving up' the ability to be completely anonymous. This helps to solve the problem of theft (identity, book, etc).

      So, would you suggest some sort of hybrid approach, where if you wanted to get the photo id card, great, or otherwise, you have to pay up front (with the card)?

      --
      I for one welcome our new [insert main topic] overlords.
    3. Re:What if Someone Steals Your Card? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why does it have to be either/or?

      Because thanks to the patriot act, anyone who can convince a librarian that they're law enforcement can find out what people are reading. They can probably even request the full records for a person. That cute girl you saw reading war of the worlds? "Who were the people who checked out War of the Worlds this week?" You don't even need to forge a judge's signature on a subpoena anymore.

    4. Re:What if Someone Steals Your Card? by Pendersempai · · Score: 1

      So let the libraries require a PIN to use the card, and keep a spare card at home. Problem solved.

  59. Obligatory by Frobisher · · Score: 1

    Only old Korean people use the library anymore...

  60. I like tin foil*, but... by kmortelite · · Score: 1

    Hey guys, I like tin foil hats. I think privacy is a good thing. I don't want to be tracked by RFID tags. I don't like cookies. But LIBRARY CARDS? Come on. Who cares if the librarian that helps you check out your latest book sees a list of the books you currently have out, or even the last year's worth?

    Are they selling this information to marketers? I don't think so. Are they calling you in the middle of the night and harrassing you for checking out Ender's Game for the 4th time? I don't think so. What's the big deal?

    I like privacy, but come on.

    * Aluminium for my British brothers out there. :-)

    1. Re:I like tin foil*, but... by iolagnm · · Score: 1

      I believe the biggest concern is that the lists of library books you check out will be used by government or other agencies for profiling.

  61. Librarians are typically quite ethical by benhocking · · Score: 1
    It's illegal for a library to tell anyone, even a lawyer, so we'll just have to trust the government on this.

    I doubt any such law would prevent many librarians from yelling from the highest mountain if the USA PATRIOT Act were used in such a way. This is similar to the law "forcing" journalists to reveal their sources. The law cannot do that - it can merely punish journalists for failing to reveal their sources.

    --
    Ben Hocking
    Need a professional organizer?
  62. This won't work by SilverJets · · Score: 1

    People will just think that they paid $15 for a book and will keep it. The libraries won't have any books left.

    Want to buy a book? Go to a bookstore.

    Want to borrow a book? Provide identification, get a borrows card, and check out a book from your library.

    Don't want to share your personal information in order to borrow a book? Too bad. Don't like it? Fine, go here

  63. Librarians are important why again? by scrout · · Score: 0

    WTF, are all librarians militant? STFU and keep the library running and stop giving us YOUR OPINION on privacy issues already. Its not your job!! You are a govt employee with way better pension and bennies than most of us, but your opinion on privacy issues is not relevent. If you are asked by your mayor/count commission/whatever to take the name of everyone that enters the door, do it or find another job. In fact, I'll take the Fin job.
    Your opinion is no more valuable than customers on what can and cant be done with library information.

  64. You're touching on the huge hole in the system by bobpence · · Score: 1

    The purpose of these cards would be to protect the library from loss, assuming the only reason to be able to trace library patrons is to recover unreturned items. Assume a small library loses $1000 worth of books per year, buys the replacements, buys $5000 in new books, pays $4000 for utilities, pays $80,000 for wages, and has $10,000 in other expenses. The $1000 they recoup from the anonymous prepaid library cards is 1% of their budget. Where do they get the rest?

    Government. Which means taxes. Which means taxpayers. Which means public officials liable to the taxpayers/voters on how their funds are spent. Assume you are an official in Almost Readerless County, next to Cheap University Student County, and you implement the anonymous system. Suddenly you find your sleepy three-branch library system expanding to 18 busy branches full of textbooks and anime, at the expense of the taxpayer-funded county budget. How much of the new demand is coming from your constituents' appreciation of privacy and how much from freeloaders in the next county?

    1. Re:You're touching on the huge hole in the system by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm not entirely certain I follow how you get from "sleepy 3-branch library" with the annonymous lending system, to people freeloading, to having to fund 18 busy branches.

      Take a look at your original $100,000 budget example without annonymous borrowing:
      -$80K pays wages ($20K left)
      -$14K misc expenses ($6K left)
      -$5K new books ($1K left)
      -$100 collecting late fees ($900 left)
      -$900 replacement books (90% of loss) ($0 left)

      Net result: The library has new books, but wasn't able to replace all of the lost books. (Or maybe they manage to get the extra $250 needed to replace all of the lost books, thus impacting the county budget more than expected.)

      If people steal books in this example, does it result in the library system expanding out of control to consume the entire county budget? No, because the county will only allocate $100K to the library.

      Now, how about an anonymous-system-only library?
      Take a look at your original $100,000 budget example without annonymous borrowing:
      New assumptions: 4%APR earned on float, 1,000 people with $50 deposits on their anonymous cards.
      -$80K pays wages ($20K left)
      -$14K misc expenses ($6K left)
      -$5K new books ($1K left)
      +$2K from interest on float ($3K left)
      -$1000 replacement books (100% of loss) ($2K left)

      Net Result: The library is more self-sufficent than it used to be, and can either get the same budget from the county and provide better service (update equipment more often, etc.), or can provide the same level of service while costing the county $2000 less.

      In both cases, the cost of administering the loan-system is included in the 'misc costs' line, though after the initial outlay for equipment, the annonymous system would probably cost lest to administer, since you the replacement cost is already in your posession in the form of a security deposit, so you don't have to track someone down to get the fine.

      Please explain what I missed that caused the library system to grow out of control.

    2. Re:You're touching on the huge hole in the system by bobpence · · Score: 1

      You assume the users are the residents. My example was specifically of non-residents adding demand to the system. I believe that library users are non-anonymous not solely to get back unreturned books, but to demonstrate that the library is benefitting the same community it is funded by. My old county lacked a well-distributed library system, and one year I paid to belong to a nearby town's locally-funded library. If said library were anonymous, rather than a few people adding $25 to the library's coffers for modest usages, thousands would have added pennies apiece (through interest on the deposits) for heavy usage.

      That said, there is nothing that requires libraries to keep records of who specifically borrowed what, once it is returned. My new county has a reciprocal arrangement with the neighboring county's library system, and once the books are back on the shelves, it should matter little to them that I borrowed $19 book A at their library and one of their residents borrowed $18.99 book B from mine.

      Perhaps anonymity does not allow for non-residency, but this implies a very low level of anonymity. A court might decide that whoever administers the card program on behalf of the library is de facto part of the library, and must turn over their records if subpeonaed.

  65. Libraries confuse me by Free_Trial_Thinking · · Score: 1

    Seriously, look at all my questions:

    What is a library? How does the massive copyright industry allow libraries to exist? It seems like libraries are promoting the free exchange of information, isn't that illegal? If books can be lent out for free, why not software, why not video games? Why can't I download e-books from a libarie's website? If information should be freely available for everyone from libraries, shouldn't it also be available over the web? Is the physical act of visiting a library somehow built into the libaries' mandate?

    Overall it seems to me that libary are surviving in a small pre-industrialized niche of the information economy and being extremely careful not to offend any coorporations lest they be driven to extinction. They/we even avoid thinking about the philosophy behinds libraries too deeply lest we realize that it conflicts with our information ownership society.

    Well, after writing all my questions down, I realize that perhaps libraries could be a launching point for the free information revolution. All we need is one renegade librarian willing to lead us. Are there any risk taking libarians out there today reading this?

    1. Re:Libraries confuse me by mikeytwice · · Score: 1

      Well, copying a book is much harder and more expensive than copying a video game, e-book, or dvd, for one...

    2. Re:Libraries confuse me by ericblau · · Score: 1

      Libraries are a milleniums old tradition as a depository and index of knowledge.

      The "massive copyright industry", or at least parts of it, would undoubtedly like to see libraries go away. However, since they are still regarded as important civic institutions at a grassroots level, it will be difficult for industry to make them go away. The most successful approach is to provide ubiquitous access to materials for a small fee. (If I can get DVDs delivered to my door for a small fee to NetFlix, I don't have to travel the whole mile over to the library to check them out from a much smaller collection).

      Promoting the free exchange of information is not, in most contexts, illegal. Libraries (and individuals) are generally allowed to lend materials and/or resell materials under the concept of the "right of first sale". Libraries are not (generally) making copies of any of their materials, so they cannot be in violation of copyright law.

      Many libraries do have collections of software and/or video games. This is perfectly legal.

      Many libraries also make ebooks available, often through NetLibrary.com.

      As to whether information that is freely available to everyone in physical form in a library should be available over the web, well, there are some legal issues there, as copyright protects against the _copying_ of information, and it is inherent in the act of web publishing that copies are made.
      Services such as NetLibrary have agreements with the publishers of the ebooks that they distribute.

      Thus, the physical act of visiting a library is not built into the library mandate, but is an artifact of copyright law. Since when you visit a library you are accessing physical instantiations of (potentially) copyrighted works that have been paid for by the library, no copies are being made, and you cannot run afoul of copyright law. If remote access were possible without generating (at least transitory) copies, a physical presence should not be required.

      Libraries exist as a time honored institution, in accordance with concepts of intellectual property that were established when it was still clear to legislators that copyright was a compromise against free speech, necessary to promote the progress of the sciences and arts.

      What risks do you want librarians to take? The American Library Association already is one of the most progressive proponents of individual rights (vs. corporate rights) in terms of intellectual property law. See http://www.ala.org/ala/issues/issuesadvocacy.htm

    3. Re:Libraries confuse me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      Libraries do "lend" e-books (often locked either to a single simulaneous user or for a limited period of time). They also lend CDs, videocassettes, and DVDs, and provide access to magazine and journal articles via online database subscriptions. In the USA, libraries have a long tradition of providing access to information and entertainment resources -- and yes, some libraries are also providing gaming platforms (there's even a Google group devoted to gaming in libraries, http://groups-beta.google.com/group/LibGaming).

      AFAIK, all the studies point to library use INCREASING sales for any given book or author -- people check out a book, like it, buy a copy for Aunt Susie's birthday or buy the author's next book....

      So, why do I think anonymous library cards are not that great an idea? 1) My system, like most, deletes the link between your library card and the item you borrow the minute the item's returned. 2) The number of people who ask "Is this all I checked out? Do I have anything checked out?" is incredible. 3) Replacement cost for a book is more than just the cost of the book itself; it's also the processing necessary to get it on catalog and on the shelf.

      Yes, I'm a librarian.

  66. Americans who trust the US govt are ignorant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I see and hear people all of the time acting like all of the concerns over privacy and the way the US Govt. is gutting civil liberties is just paranoia.

    These people have not done their research, and probably also don't know much about history.

    We are now a fascist state and are becoming more extreme by the day. Don't believe me? Take a look at this, it explains what's happening quite well:

    http://www.oldamericancentury.org/14pts.htm

    Nobody loves the American country and the American people more than I, but blindly trusting this government who have lied and lied and lied (and by the way, things have been pretty Shday since Eisenhower left office - Clintons administration was better in many ways, but most were only superficial) are crazy.

    Our media is controlled. This is a fact. Mainstream media is not going to tell you certain stories, period. NPR? Give me a break. The Internet? Trust me, they've been snooping like crazy since the beginning and they have plenty of plans to make sure you are under control and toeing the party line.

    America is now an authoritarian society, becoming more so every day and it is no exaggeration to say that we are becoming a fascist theocracy. This is really sad. I remember in the 80s how the "Communists" were painted as evil, we were told that their government spied on them..

    If you doubt what I say and want to attack me, go ahead - it;s either because deep down you're in denial or you just aren't looking at what's hapenning.

  67. Librarians ethical, but still gov't employees by barefoot_mike · · Score: 1

    "Forcing" journalists to reveal sources is actually dissimilar to requiring librarians to disclose library records. The law CAN do that. The librarians are employed by the government (or "the people" if your glass is half full) and libraries are state-funded. There is no real option of discretion or conscientious objection to the disclosure of government records on the part of government employees.. god bless the patriot act.

    1. Re:Librarians ethical, but still gov't employees by geoffspear · · Score: 1

      Most librarians are not, in fact, employed by the government. Getting funding from the state doesn't make all of your employees government employees.

      --
      Don't blame me; I'm never given mod points.
  68. excellent idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I would never give my personal fingerprint to a library. Their server gets hacks and your fingerprint will be sold to crooks on the web.

    The anonymous library card is the way to go. As a librarian I am fully supporting it and will suggest it at our next meeting.

    I am not allowed to go into any details but I want to let everyone that our libary has become under tremendous pressure by conservative forces lately who create paranoia in order to push their agenda. Hopefully this is only a temporary phenomenon and we'll be able to defeat it and let freedom and privacy prevail.

  69. This is great... by Upaut · · Score: 1

    If you are worried that your "Reading List" would be 'flagged' by the FBI. I was doing a paper at one point on How and Why people followed some of what are considered to be, the most evil men in history. That meant reading up on all the literature that most people avoid:
    1. Mein Kampf
    2. Quotations from Chairman Mao
    3. Das Kapital
    4. Beyond Good and Evil (Nietzsche is actually very good for segway quotation)
    And a few others.

    And when I checked all these books out, I had this unjustified worry that in just checking these books out something quite bad was going to happen, that some where sattilites were linking, my information was being bounced from one system to another, and that I was going to be blacklisted for life... 'Course now I think I was just being parinoid, but a system like this would of helped my worrying greatly.

    --
    3 degrees of separation from Vladimir Putin
  70. You made a bad mistake... by benhocking · · Score: 1

    You used the words "bomb assassinate bush terror allah osama jihad" in a post on /. using your /. ID. You will now be on terrorist watch lists until you die. Wait, I said "bomb assassinate bush terror allah osama jihad", too! Arrgh! I said "bomb assassinate bush terror allah osama jihad", again! ...

    --
    Ben Hocking
    Need a professional organizer?
  71. Libraries do appreciate money however by btarval · · Score: 1
    That may well be, but another way of looking at this is as a revenue enhancement method for the library. If the library charges a certain amount of money for those who wish the anonymous card, the library can earn interest off of the money.

    In short, the library is at no risk financially for lost books, and gets to make money off the interest. Plus it provides a new service for those who want it.

    It's a win-win situation all around.

    That's why the GP is flat-out wrong; this will work, and work quite well. I'd like to see one single public library which DOESN'T need more funding.

    --
    The best way to predict the future is to create it. - Peter Drucker.
  72. Why not have open-proxy libraries? by whimdot · · Score: 1

    You go to your local library with a sealed request for a book, they forward it to another library who return a sealed copy of the book you requested. You pick up the copy at your local library and, when done, return it sealed, with the reference number they gave you at the start of the transaction. The issuing library can still issue fines by proxy if need be.

  73. Mostly true by benhocking · · Score: 1

    However, I was comparing "forcing" journalists to reveal sources to "preventing" librarians from revealing that the USA PATRIOT Act was used to require them to disclose library records. That the law cannot do (short of executing the librarians) for the same reason it cannot force journalists to reveal their sources.

    Nevertheless, the law cannot actually force librarians not to destroy the library records, either. :)

    --
    Ben Hocking
    Need a professional organizer?
  74. Priorities by TapeCutter · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I would describe the the first few years of my (way too young) marriage as "first world poverty", we were easily in the bottom 20% bracket. I lost access to the library because I could not afford to pay the fine for a misplaced book. My answer was "op-shops" and second hand books, I never went without smokes because I rolled my own and to this day (25yrs later) I am still addicted. The biggest problem with being poor is that you get oh-so-fucking-sick of scrimping and chasing work. When you occasionally get a wad of cash you stock the cuboards, pay the red bills, get new clothes for the kids and blow the rest on a dirty weekend because you just want a break from it, even for a day.

    I agree 100% with your sentiments (except poor does not imply uneducated), if you really want privacy you will find the $50 (~2 slabs in Australian money). If you are that dirt poor that you can't afford it then simply read the book in the library, trust me, you will have the spare time and it will cut down your smoking (librarians frown on that type of thing in thier library).

    Librarians are a powerfull force in upholding everyones right to read Chairman Mao, the Koran, the Bible, the Unabomer's manifesto, Osama BL's diatribes or anything we fucking feel like. The interest from a single account would amount to the best part of nothing to anyone living in a country that has local libraries in the first place. If the system became popular, (no offence but I'm sure you would get takers in the US), the total interest could be a tidy sum and used to enhance what I consider is a service at the core of any "free" civilization.

    To all the naysayers that are throwing up red herrings such as poverty what is the alternative besides the current status-quo (ie: no option of annonomous accounts for anyone)?

    --
    And did you exchange a walk on part in the war for a lead role in a cage? - Pink Floyd.
    1. Re:Priorities by optimusNauta · · Score: 1

      Why not give people the option of being anonymous if they are willing to provide alternative collateral? It doesn't have to be manditory. Someone who doesn't think its worth the interest or can't afford it could simply get a library card as is the status quo. You could argue that this unfairly infringes on the search and seizure rights of the poor, but then again, maybe keeping a government record of checked out books does the same thing.

    2. Re:Priorities by TapeCutter · · Score: 1

      I didn't mean to imply the existing system should be scrapped. I think most people would still use it. I think people with a "profile" and casual visitors would be the main users but annonymity should at least be an option.

      --
      And did you exchange a walk on part in the war for a lead role in a cage? - Pink Floyd.
  75. You don't get it... by Proteus · · Score: 1
    You clearly don't get it. There is no cross-checking to be done, because you are never asked for your personal information.

    Ok, scneario. Assume that I've never had a library card at library A:

    • I walk into the library, approach the "cards" desk.
    • I hand over $50, and the library creates a new numbered account with $50 in it.
    • I am handed a card with the account number on it.
    • I walk to the rack and select a book worth less than $50.
    • I walk to the circulation desk and check out my book; $50 is "frozen" in that numbered account.
    • A few weeks later, I return my book, and the $50 is "unfrozen" in the account the book was checked out to.
    • I decide I no longer want my library card, and I surrender it for a $50 cash refund.
    At no point in that sequence did the Library need to know who I was. So, DHS could get a dump of everything checked out, but unless they are already suspicious of me and get hold of my account number (e.g. by searching my person), that data is useless. There is no way to associate it to me using only the Library's data.

    As to your other "no anonymous reading/living/driving/renting anywhere", two points. One, this evolved not as a result of "Big Brother" but mostly as a result of individuals and corporations wanting to track their customers; someone who wants to sell or rent something of value to you usually wants to know who you are, for obvious reasons. Two, remarkably little of those are actually requirements -- your landlord doesn't have to track who you are, for example. Most do, because it's good business to do so -- it ensures that you get paid. However, it is perfectly possible to find people willing to rent a room, house, or apartment where you pay in cash, in advance. However, you also likely give up your rights should the landlord screw you: after all, you can't prove you ever rented the place.

    The same relationship exists for a lot of things. One can be quite anonymous in our society -- but one has to give up some things as well. Everything is a tradeoff. If I don't want the state to register my photo, I don't need to get a driver's license. Of course, I'll then be limited to public transportation, biking, and walking; it's a trade.

    The government didn't historically issue IDs and the like for nefarious purposes -- a driver's license was originally issued for one reason: to eliminate the need to arrest people for summary offenses (e.g. speeding), since they know who you are and where you live they can just write a ticket. It's something the citizenry wanted for the sake of convenience. What to watch out for isn't identification, it's the abuse of the system for nefarious ends: I shouldn't need to provide my driver's licence to check out books from a public library, but I appreciate the convenience of not having to get arrested if I go 10mph over on the way to work.

    --
    We may not imagine how our lives could be more frustrating and complex—but Congress can. – Cullen Hightower
  76. A Good Source of Funding...which won't be embraced by Noksagt · · Score: 1
    I would gladly put $5 on a rechargeable card each month for a year in order to protect my anonymity AND to support my local library (I have no problem letting them live off the float on the cash).
    I would only think this would work if the deposit was much higher.. but of course then no one would use it.
    I don't think the deposit needs to be significantly higher--just high enough to pay for whatever material is actually checked out on the card. However, that ISN'T why it won't be used. People have time-and-time-again shown that they are willing to sacrifice privacy for reduced effort. Even if the system were free or only a few dollars, people wouldn't volunteer for the program. Encrypting email carries near-zero financial costs, but how many do that? Even several popular web services don't use SSL by default.
  77. Has anyone actually read the USA PATIOT Act? by vortex2.71 · · Score: 3, Informative

    I'm not a big fan of the PATRIOT Act, but I'm always apalled by the number of people, and who pontificate on its provisions without actually reading them! The referenced article states " Unfortunately, if an over-zealous special agent on a fishing expedition wants to know ... the librarian will probably have little choice. Under the USA PATRIOT Act, he or she would have to surrender the personal identity information that was originally collected to protect the library's materials."

    This just isn't true! If you are going to express opinions on the PATTRIOT Act then try reading some of it so that your opinion is based on fact. The pertinent section of the PATRIOT Act is Title II section 215

    Anyone notice the part about it not applying to activities protected by the first ammendment? Or the part about needing a warrant from a judge? Or the part about the agent needing to have a particular rank to pursue a library inquiry?

    Here is the text of section 215, although a download of the PDF serves much better:

    "SEC. 215. ACCESS TO RECORDS AND OTHER ITEMS UNDER THE FOREIGN INTELLIGENCE SURVEILLANCE ACT. Title V of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act of 1978 (50 U.S.C. 1861 et seq.) is amended by striking sections 501 through 503 and inserting the following: ''SEC. 501. ACCESS TO CERTAIN BUSINESS RECORDS FOR FOREIGN INTELLIGENCE AND INTERNATIONAL TERRORISM INVESTIGATIONS. ''(a)(1) The Director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation or a designee of the Director (whose rank shall be no lower than Assistant Special Agent in Charge) may make an application for an order requiring the production of any tangible things (including books, records, papers, documents, and other items) for an investigation to protect against international terrorism or clandestine intelligence activities, provided that such investigation of a United States person is not conducted solely upon the basis of activities protected by the first amendment to the Constitution. ''(2) An investigation conducted under this section shall-- ''(A) be conducted under guidelines approved by the Attorney General under Executive Order 12333 (or a successor order); and ''(B) not be conducted of a United States person solely upon the basis of activities protected by the first amendment to the Constitution of the United States. ''(b) Each application under this section-- ''(1) shall be made to-- ''(A) a judge of the court established by section 103(a); or ''(B) a United States Magistrate Judge under chapter 43 of title 28, United States Code, who is publicly designated by the Chief Justice of the United States to have the power to hear applications and grant orders for the production of tangible things under this section on behalf of a judge of that court; and 50 USC 1861. ''(2) shall specify that the records concerned are sought for an authorized investigation conducted in accordance with subsection (a)(2) to obtain foreign intelligence information not concerning a United States person or to protect against international terrorism or clandestine intelligence activities. ''(c)(1) Upon an application made pursuant to this section, the judge shall enter an ex parte order as requested, or as modified, approving the release of records if the judge finds that the application meets the requirements of this section. ''(2) An order under this subsection shall not disclose that it is issued for purposes of an investigation described in subsection (a). ''(d) No person shall disclose to any other person (other than those persons necessary to produce the tangible things under this section) that the Federal Bureau of Investigation has sought or obtained tangible things under this section. ''(e) A person who, in good faith, produces tangible things under an order pursuant to this section shall not be liable to any other person for such production. Such production shall not be deemed to constitute a waiver of any privilege in any other proceeding or context."

  78. My Store Discount cards are fake by WillAffleckUW · · Score: 1

    they're registered to Richard M. Nixon and other people who live at slightly altered variants of my phone and address.

    With Photoshop, you can get enough to do the same at the library.

    We're Americans - those under seige by the "Patriot Act" - we believe in Freedom!

    --
    -- Tigger warning: This post may contain tiggers! --
  79. nice math! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Only on slashdot would people check your math.. you did it correctly:

    (The twelveth root of 1.04) * $50 - $50 = 0.163687
    (0.04 / 12) * 50 = 0.166666

    You rounded down, so you use the root version that accounted for the compounding. Well done!

  80. What anonymity? by techwrench · · Score: 1

    With the Patriot Act still in place, allowing the government to check library listings, it would not take much for 'Big Brother' to just install surveillance equipment outside the libraries to circumvent the whole issue.

    --
    It's You and I against the World... When do we attack?
  81. Really subversive by Zerth · · Score: 1

    If the deposit is refundable by turning in the card, then you could use this as an anonymous electronic cash system. Deposit some money into an account, then send the magstripe data to somebody, they rewrite their card with it, go to the library and withdraw the cash.

  82. Hrm by The+Cisco+Kid · · Score: 1

    "Like a gift card, a phone card, or indeed a $20 bill, an anonymous library card represents value that vanishes if the card is lost or damaged. This is a risk that library users take for granted in these other situations, and so they should readily understand it."

    But why even have the card? Why would you need to pre-deposit money - why not merely collect the rented items replacement cost at the time of checkout, and then upon its safe and intact return, refund it again? With phone cards you prepay for two reasons, one, you are getting a 'bulk discount' by purchasing a large amount at once, as well as a 'loyalty' discount becuase you arent going to payphones and picking a different carrier each time. Since payphones only accept coins, the convenience here is not having to carry coins, or to have to look for somewhere to get change if you need to make a call. With giftcards, the person paying the money is not the same as the person spending the money. The reasons are that a giftcard is (slightly) less tacky than giving cash, if you use a one-store-card then you may get a 'loyalty' discount as well, since the gift amount can only be spent at that store, and if you use a 'credit card' type of gift card (Visa, M/C, etc), then the person can also use it online or for a phone order (where using cash would be problematic)

    For a library, none of these concerns is really present. The library could easily accept cash, the deposit can easily be made *at* the time of checkout, the same person providing the cash is the one checking out the item. And you can't check out a physical library item over the net or a phone call.

    By avoiding the card, you avoid creating this 'additional' bearer item to worry about losing. You only have to worry about being careful to hang onto your cash, which is a pretty well ingrained instinct with most folk.

  83. She? SHE?!? by ayeco · · Score: 1

    So only women can get the anonymous library cards?

  84. If you're not with us, then you're against us by homebrewmike · · Score: 1

    It's obvious that librarians are just another bunch of liberal aids to the terrorists. It's obvious that they must be stopped. Therefore, we need to eliminate their funding. After, with all the fine educational television, who visits libraries anymore?

    Mod me as flaimbait, but the political discussion in the US is getting that rediculous. And that scary. Just watch - if the Librarians counter with something like this, the rabid right will follow suit.

    Again, you got your guns (as if there was any danger of "liberals taking them away...") but we're loosing basic civil liberties. Are you really as free as your party would like you to believe?

  85. Get a Life by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    These people don't need anonomous library cards. They need either counseling or the discipline to stay away from the nutty web sites that feed their paranoia.

    And Slashdot should have enough sense not to feed this silliness. This is as dumb as the groups who claim Pres. Bush has made the US a police state. No one in a police state stands up and says things like that. No one in Nazi Germany complained publicly about the Gestapo. People in the USSR did not openly criticize the KGB. And when CNN was covering up Saddam's mass murders, no Iraqi could safely stand up and criticize its dictator-pandering journalists.

    In short, there are a lot of Slashdot readers who need to turn off their PCs and "get a life." They need to deal with real problems and forget these dreamed up illusions.

    --Mike Perry, Untangling Tolkien

    1. Re:Get a Life by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      See my previous post about people whose response to serious questions being asked about the current poltical state in our country is to call it "paranoia."

      Keep saying that. Eventually even people like you will see what's happening, but by then it will be too late.

      http://www.oldamericancentury.org/

      The above site has real journalism on it, not corporate "talking points."

      Not everybody who feels the way I do is a "geek" holed up inside all day on their computer. It might even be possible that some of us are in a better position to know about what the US government getting away with then you are.

  86. White bicycle experiment by Software · · Score: 1
    Try http://www.nccnsw.org.au/member/cmass/resources/ma ssive/may98.pdf (sorry, PDF)

    Summary: White bicycles were scattered around Amsterdam in the 60s for people to use. They got stolen and vandalized, so the experiment didn't work.

    1. Re:White bicycle experiment by John+Newman · · Score: 1
      Summary: White bicycles were scattered around Amsterdam in the 60s for people to use. They got stolen and vandalized, so the experiment didn't work.
      Interesting, because Copenhagen has an ongoing "free-bicycle" program, and it seems to work fine. It requires only a $3 deposit, which presumably doesn't cover the cost of the bike.
  87. copies not the issue by hotsauce · · Score: 1

    Libraries (and individuals) are generally allowed to lend materials and/or resell materials under the concept of the "right of first sale". Libraries are not (generally) making copies of any of their materials, so they cannot be in violation of copyright law.

    you keep saying this, but its not that simple. if i start publically screening dvds ive purchased, even though no copies have been made, the mpaa will come down hard (w/ the fbi, they promise)

    1. Re:copies not the issue by ericblau · · Score: 1

      Yes, I glossed over public performance rights, and copyright law is...subtle when it comes to what constitutes a public performance. However, it really isn't relevant to this discussion, as none of the library services mentioned involved public performance. If it would make you happier, I retract the sentence in the way that it was formerly stated, and rephrase as following:

      Libraries are not (generally) making copies of their matierials, nor holding public performances of copyrighted works, so they cannot be in violation of copyright law.

      BTW, a fairly nice FAQ about public performance rights can be found here: http://www.utsystem.edu/ogc/intellectualproperty/m ono3.htm

  88. Red Flags and Red Cards by writerjosh · · Score: 1

    I think the anonymous cash cards are a great idea. I don't know why they didn't think of this long ago (I guess there was no real reason to). Libraries are now having fight with their patrons over identity privacy and they shouldn't have to. It's already hard enough to get people to utilize their local libraries, now with the Patriot Act, that is even harder.

    So I say, use the cash-based system and check out books to your hearts content. I know in my day I've checked out books that might send up a red flag, but my intent was usually for school reports, not terrorism. Uncle Sam doesn't know my intent when I check out a book, so just putting up a red flag on Mein Kampf doesn't asses my intentions on reading it.

  89. your three points by hotsauce · · Score: 1

    1 all the ones ive seen dont. how do i know which is which? how do i know when a library quietly changes its policy?

    2 why cant i swipe the anon card to see whats checked out?

    3 bookstores dont need to tack extra surcharges onto a book for "processing", but whatever... just charge a little extra to the anon card to cover your processing

    librarian, talk to your it people. yes, i am an "it people" :)

  90. Your tinfoil hat is on backwards mate. by TapeCutter · · Score: 1

    "or possesion of one would be considered evidence that you're up to no good." - If it got to that stage then libraries would be the least of your worries.

    To paraphrase TFA, with an annomous account the spooks MUST start with a suspect and use thier card to find out what books the suspect is reading. A resonable use would be a crime commited that was inspired by an obscure movie/novel the suspect had borrowed.

    With an ID account the spooks can start with a book containing "bad ideas" and then round up the suspects. There is no valid use unless somehow the spook already knows the obscure movie/book exits.

    TFA also points out the Patriot act gives spooks the power to secretly look at existing ID accounts, historically if you give spooks that kind of power they will use it to silence thier masters opposition.

    the excuse "well, you can get an anonymous card if you like" - but of course, no one really does.

    Considering the current US political climate, if I were an honest politician (oxymoron?) or an amnesty international executive, I would consider this system a need rather than a want.

    Actually, it's worse. - If you straighten your hat and read TFA, it's actually better.

    MOD: It would also help if you the read TFA before hitting "insightfull".

    --
    And did you exchange a walk on part in the war for a lead role in a cage? - Pink Floyd.
    1. Re:Your tinfoil hat is on backwards mate. by putaro · · Score: 1

      Use your brain. If the only types of cards available were these anonymous cards, yes, it would be better. If these are only optional, no, it's a loss.

      Most innocent people will not get anonymous cards. Neither will many "suspicious" people. We have encryption software available. How many people use it? So, if you start with the mindset that there's a possibility of your suspect being stupid it's still worthwhile to go on fishing expeditions. And you will start pulling in the people who checked out the "Anarchists's Cookbook" and "Catcher in the Rye" to do term papers. So, no increase in privacy for people who consider themselves innocent and no decrease in fishing expeditions.

    2. Re:Your tinfoil hat is on backwards mate. by TapeCutter · · Score: 1

      That wooshing sound you hear is the whole point of the article going over your head.

      --
      And did you exchange a walk on part in the war for a lead role in a cage? - Pink Floyd.
  91. Why make the libraries do it themselves? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Always thinking like a capitalist:

    Why not privatize this and charge for it?
    • Come to an agreement with the library to obtain a number of cards for your "family" of 100 children with no ID.
    • Limit the number of books each "child" can check out (like only one book).
    • Rent out the cards with a large collateral to people.
    • If they don't return the book, you get the bill from the library and settle it with them and the card renter doesn't get any/all of his collateral back (but he does get a nice library card to use on the book he just bought).
    • You can even take credit cards as collateral if you discard the information about which library card they used after they return it.
    The funny thing is that it might be a bit challenging knowing when you can return the collateral since it takes time for the book to become overdue and you don't know if they checked out the book the day before returning the card. Though with a good library, you might be able to check card status online.
  92. My first "MOD PARENT UP" post by NecrosisLabs · · Score: 1

    Makohund hit the nail on the head here. One more point that I don't think was mentioned.. A lot of books carried by libraries are out of print. Fifteen dollars is nowhere near the replacement cost of many of these books. A possible solution would be to increase the amount of the security deposit based on the replacement value, but that means maintaing an entirely new pricing system, and, more importantly, means pricing large numbers of people from being able to view books. The more I think about this idea, the more it pisses me off. To a significant number of public library patrons, twenty dollars is a lot of money to be locked away in a card. Privacy is a good thing, but only if you can afford it. I already dislike having to pay a premium at the grocery store to keep my purchase habits from being tracked, I'd hate to have to do this at the library.

  93. Mod parent up by Kadin2048 · · Score: 1

    This is a really good system. I would hope that there aren't so many dangerous books that we need to go to all this, but I can certainly see it getting this way in the future.

    --
    "Ladies and gentlemen, my killbot features Lotus Notes and a machine gun. It is the finest available."
  94. So I have to buy my privacy... by raam · · Score: 1


    That's capitalism, you say?

  95. Practical? by imess · · Score: 1

    In our library we can check out any (reasonable) number of materials. And I have seen a lot of parents borrow 20-30 books/taps/cds at a time for their children, or college students ~5 hardcovers for their projects once a while. A low deposit encourages stealing, while a high deposit discourages checkouts...

  96. Is it really private? by DigitalOSH · · Score: 1

    nowadays, as the world leans more and more to only accepting credit and debit cards, im sure that there would be a way for the government/whoever else is interested to tie your "Anony-Card" to your bank account or credit card account... Time to get your tin-foil hats out!

    --
    "Its a grey area". "How grey?" "Somewhat of a charcoal shade"
  97. I see.... by ShoobieRat · · Score: 1

    "Here's an example: If a privacy-minded user deposits $20 to get an anonymous library card, she can check out The Terror State without identifying herself. Her account balance is temporarily reduced by $15, and when the library checks the CD back in (in good condition), her balance is restored to its original value."

    So she goes in, slaps down a $20, "borrows" a $40 book, and makes a $20 profit.

  98. Free -- not paid ??? by TapeCutter · · Score: 1

    By "free", I think they meant "free as in beer".

    This system is a simple and effective method of obfuscation, it forces the govt to start an investigation with a criminal suspect rather than a "criminal idea" and safegaurds community property against theft just as effectively as the current system.

    Arguing the Patriot act is wrong and hoping that govt's won't look at records (of any type) is foolish. This system can't stop them looking, however it ensures that the govt would have to use extreme measures to get bulk information that connects individuals to "bad ideas". This has the practical effect of nullifying the snooping power of the patriot act. As it is now they can walk into any library, dump the database and enforce secrecy by legally gagging a few librarians.

    "Two classes": There is nothing to stop anyone from having both types of accounts. One for normal borrowing, the other for iffy(TM) borrowing. Iffy(TM) material is not normally expensive (eg: M.Moore's F9/11, Amnesty International's latest report). If you really want privacy and really can't afford to loan $50 to the library for a few days. I would expect to find you already living in a cardboard box and it should be obvious by now that nobody in power gives a shit about what you think or say.

    "I would only think this would work if the deposit was much higher.. but of course then no one would use it." - I'm sure M.L.King and other pacifists of the time would have appreciated the option had it been available.

    --
    And did you exchange a walk on part in the war for a lead role in a cage? - Pink Floyd.
  99. Overwhelm Them by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Why not overwhelm the Department of Homeland Security folks? If everyone in the country routinely went to libraries and checked out materials that are "suspicious," the DoHS wouldn't be able to keep up, especially if that effort raised the level of "background noise." The only other option would be to ban the books outright, which I think would get an even larger public outcry.

  100. yes it's a great idea by ffflala · · Score: 1

    I am a credentialed, ALA card-carrying librarian, and I think this is a GREAT idea. To all the "it will never work!" people, I'll be blunt: you don't know what the fuck you're talking about. There are numerous types of user accounts, this is a welcome addition and a great solution.

    Think it's unfair that it requires actual MONEY to secure materials? Tough shit, folks. It cost us money, and if we're public, that money came from property taxes, bond measures, or other public resources. It's not like we're trying to keep the poor folks down. Much as I'd love to have an endless supply of books free for the taking (honest, I would) we just can't give away things YOU paid for.

    While I am concerned that people get to access information with as little censorship/obstacles as possible (note: sometimes we do laugh at the crap you're into), we do need some way to track our material. The best privacy guarantee would be the "honor system" -- unfortunately, as human nature is not yet perfected, people are not honorable enough in gnereal to keep all the best material from disappearing from our shelves.

    We let you take things for free, as long as you return them -- and no, we can't take your word for it that you'll bring it back. So here's a way to keep us from knowing any personal info about you by saving us the trouble of having to send your cheap ass to collections when you disappear with the Kung-Pao Soccer DVD or the latest Mark Minasi book -- you'll just be out the money that it cost us. It's fair, so SHHHHH!!!

  101. Solution in Search of a Problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I think this proposal is basically a solution in search of a problem. Borrower files are generally purged already when materials are returned. And how many times has section 215 of the Patriot Act actually been invoked to access a patron's library records? AFAIK, ZERO.

  102. It works like this in my city by joaobranco · · Score: 1

    Well, not really the anonymous part (though I can be anonymous, since I'm not required an valid ID to
    check my personal data).

    Here, you can either get a public library card by placing some money (it was 5 last time I checked) in the library fund OR by getting a signed recomendation by any business store (which will "vouch" by the patron good behaviour).

    Notice that using the library (in place) is free for all, but to take books (and CD/DVDs) home, you have to pay a (very low) anuall fee (about 2,5).