LibrarianActivist.org


Archive for the ‘information commons’


Taking information into your own hands.

Chip Ward’s illuminating article on how the library has become a de facto ’shelter’ in place of the state’s shrunken safety net provides an excellent opportunity to look at how ppl who are often perceived as non-citizens, non-persons, non-existant nuisances in the collective conscience are reclaiming their power and identities.

Here are some props to ‘information’ efforts that seek to give voiceless groups space to speak for themselves by putting the media in their own hands.

First is Homeless Nation, a Canada wide non-profit organization that provides an online community and forum for homeless people to express their point of view, and an opportunity for the public to interact with and learn some things about being homeless in Canada. Launched in [June] no, April of 2006, membership has grown to over 2000 participants.

Mentions of Homeless Nation in the media can be found here and here and in Rabble podcasts here.

Second is an archives that is documenting the history and cultural heritage of people who’ve been in contact with the psychiatric system.

Librarians, carve out a wee moment in your hectic schedules check out the Psychiatric Survivor Archives, Toronto. It’s a forum and space that aims to preserve the history of psychiatric survivors for current and future generations. PSAT seeks to create an opportunity to restore a sense of agency and personhood to psychiatric survivors, to value their lived experience, history and culture, and to engage a voiceless and stigmatized population in the democratic process of self expression.

Articles here and here published recently in the Toronto Star speak to MAD pride, a movement akin to the ‘queering’ of gay/lesbian culture.

- PC

Librivox and CivicAccess

Here is a rad and inspiring interview with Hugh McGuire, founder and Head Rockstar of Librivox. What a good, good man.

At the end of the show, he talks about where the “Librivox model” can go, and brings up the need to make basic data available to the public for urban planning, environment, health, and political purposes. One group that’s working on making such data available in the public domain is CivicAccess. They’re currently trying to make electoral information freely available to everyone who wants to use it because, at present, the database that links postal codes to electoral information (e.g. based on your postal code, who’s your MP?) is a licensed one. And the license ain’t cheap — it starts at $2900 — fine for marketing companies but not so accessible for citizens’ and not-for-profit groups. CivicAcces want to do the same with the 2006 StatsCan Census information and other civic data. More good people!

-SIO

“Don’t Mind Me, I’m Dead” - The Library and Homelessness

An article about the shift in the role of public library from “library” to “homeless shelter”. (via MetaFilter which, as always, has lots of good discussion around all aspects of this issue.)

- JH

So Sue Me, RIAA.

Some talented and tech savvy lawyers crafted a letter that led to theRecording Industry Association of America voluntarily withdrawing a malicious lawsuit .

Here’s a quote:

“Your client take the position that my middle-aged, conservative clients should speculate regarding the identity of persons your clients’ claim used their AOL account to download pornographic-lyric gangsta rap tracks as predicate to possible case resolution. In an age of Wintel-virus created bot-farms, spoofs, and easily cracked WEP encrypted wireless home networks (among other easy hacks), the only tech-savvy response to such a request is, “You’ve got to be kidding.”"

end quote.

-PC | source Recording Industry vs. the People

Free the hospital records!

An editorial in the Toronto Star today speaks to lifting secrecy from the medical realm. (To me) this is a call to arms … especially within a publicly funded health care system. (Duh).

Here are some of the highlights:

    1. 23 000+ ppl per year die in Canadian hospitals due to adverse events

    2. access to information is dependent on jurisdiction and the POV of hospital administrators, not the Access to Information Act.

    3. the dismal surgical record of an Ontario surgeon - not available to the public - led to more than a dozen women suffering physical and emotional harm under his care

Link.

Ontario legislators are debating health accountability legislation this week. How about siding with public safety on this one.

This article is the third in a series in the Star about coming clean about medical errors.

Check the first two out here and here.

-PC

LibriVox | free audio books

LibriVox is a volunteer project with the goal of making public domain works available as audio books.

There’s a plethora of goodies here for bibliophiles.

Not only is the availability of classic works a beautiful thing, but access to audio books is a boon to those who benefit from having access to books through alternative mediums … coming to mind:

  • people who self-identify as LD, ADHD, or visually impaired
  • people on extremely long road trips
  • podcast junkies
  • If you’ve been meaning to contribute your voice (literally) to an information cause, sign up to volunteer and read a chapter or two …

    via Boing, Boing, who cited the recent addition of Darwin’s “On the Origin of the Species by Means of Natural Selection” to the collection.

    -PC

    Gamer Faces Prosecution For Using Library WiFi After Hours From Parking Lot

    A 21 year old gamer in Palmer, Alaska had his laptop confiscated and faces possible criminal charges for illegally accessing WiFi at the Palmer, Alaska library after hours from the parking lot.

    Some observers online point out that the library could easily thwart such violations of their usage policies by disabling the signal as part of the library’s closing procedures while others suggest that this user has a history of piggybacking on the WiFi of other businesses and organizations and this unauthorized access shouldn’t be allowed.

    (via Digg)

    - JH

    LISZen - Library Blog Search Engine

    Wayne State LIS student, Garrett Hungerford who runs Library Zen has used the new Google Co-op service to create a search engine of library blogs. The Library Zen companion site is called LISZen. (Hmm, if only I knew a library-related blog I could submit…)

    - JH

    PLG Statement on Powell Library Tasering Incident

    A follow-up to a recent post about a very disturbing incident…

    PRESS RELEASE

    November 27, 2006

    The Progressive Librarians Guild today issued the following statement:

    The Progressive Librarians Guild (PLG) condemns the violent treatment of
    Iranian-American student Mostafa Tabatabainejad at the Powell Library of
    the University of California (UCLA) on November 14, 2006.

    Caught on video, and viewed by witnesses, the police assault on
    Mr.Tabatabainejad is a violation of Mr. Tabatabainejad’s constitutional
    rights under U.S. law, and the U.N. Convention Against Torture and Other
    Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment (CAT).

    PLG believes there are no circumstances under which such police behavior
    can be sanctioned or rationalized given eyewitness accounts, video
    documentation, and the statements of parties to the event. No university
    security policy can legitimately sanction or condone this type of police
    assault with a potentially deadly weapon.

    PLG, a group of librarians and library workers, is particularly appalled
    that this incident occurred during a random security check of ID cards at
    the Powell Library. The abusive and violent intimidation that occurred
    against Mr.Tabatabainejad compromises the security that libraries
    traditionally have offered their users.

    We condemn the violent actions against Mr. Tabatabainejad. We call for the
    UCLA and Powell Library administration to immediately convene a
    nonpartisan, public investigation into campus security policies.

    For further information contact: Mark Rosenzweig – iskra@earthlink.com
    Elaine Harger – eharger@agoron.net

    Information about PLG is available at http://libr.org/plg

    - JH

    Welcome to Canada Net Neutrality!

    Well. The issue of net neutrality has finally docked in the Canadian media with stories as reported by Kyenta. What is net neutrality? It’s basically federal legislation that prevents telecommunications companies (like Bell, Rogers, and Telus) from filtering content from the Internet. As Michael Geist says in a blog posting,

    In recent months, Internet service providers in Canada and the U.S. have begun to sketch out a vision of a two-tiered Internet in which they charge websites to deliver their content to consumers, limit consumers’ ability to use certain applications, and reserve the right to charge premiums for the use of services such as Internet telephony.

    Net neutrality prevents that kind of corporate freedom, and such legislation made its rounds in the United States where telecommunications giants essentially prevented its becoming law. According to The Canadian Press, “U.S. legislators are currently reviewing their decision to scrap the law … big U.S. telecom companies are on their best behaviour as they await a final green light.” And now it’s coming to Canada.

    Usually when we hear about a public policy issue on the news and a particular stance is supported by a corporation or industry spokesperson, we can be pretty sure that the public interest lies somewhere opposite anything the spokes say. Net neutrality is a bit more complicated, though, because one industry group (content providers like Google, Yahoo, Microsoft, etc.) claims to support net neutrality legislation and another (telecommunications companies and internet service providers or ISPs, like Bell, Rogers, Telus, etc.) opposes it.

    ISPs (the telecoms) want to be able to be the Internet’s content gatekeepers. As Ben Scott (of Free Press and SavetheInternet.com) told the CP, telecoms “say, `Well, we own the wires and instead of treating all bits alike in a non-discriminatory fashion, we’re going to set up special deals and if you [content providers like Google, Yahoo, Microsoft, etc.] have the money, you can pay us to make your websites go much faster. And you can pay us to set up an exclusive deal where your website goes very fast and your competitor’s doesn’t.’ ”

    Content providers, then, support net neutrality because it would prevent ISPs from charging them for preferential access to customers (e.g. if you want faster access to customers, you have to pay us). The content providers are calling foul, claiming that without net neutrality laws, the Internet will belong to the wealthiest corporations who can buy the prime bandwidth from the telecommunications corporations. Indeed, we might ask - if people have to pay to be seen, where will that leave the CBC or alternative media? Or blogs like this one? Or anti-poverty groups? And in case you think websites can’t be blocked, think again. FreePress reports:

    …already there’s been extensive documentation of abuse of power from network owners. For example, in 2004, North Carolina ISP Madison River blocked DSL customers from using its rival Vonage’s Voice Over Internet Protocol (VOIP) services. In 2005, the Canadian telecom corporation Telus blocked its users from accessing a pro-union website during a Telus labor dispute. And in 2006, Time Warner blocked a mass-email campaign from its customers that was critical of AOL’s proposed tiered email system.

    Bad, right? Right. Here are some sources to check out (in addition to the ones listed in this posting):

    * The final report of the Telecommunications Policy Review Panel (especially the parts about “unjust discrimination”). The TPRP was mandated to conduct a review of the Canadian telecommunications framework (Michael Geist provides a fairly nuanced analysis).

    * The Alternative Telecommunications Policy Forum has an excellent page on net neutrality.

    * Kevin McArthur from StormTide Digital Studios (in Duncan BC) has created this website on net neutrality.

    * Free Press and SavetheInternet.com

    * And Heiko has already gone through the world and annotated all the good Net Neutrality vids out there. Thank-you!

    Three last thoughts:

    One. I feel so lucky to live in Ottawa right now - there’s a not-for-profit Internet service provider here called the National Capital Freenet. And the public library happens to be a partner in the project. Therefore, a little less money goes to corporations trying to make a buck.

    Two. I dashed onto YouTube to pull up Jon Stewart’s Net Neutrality video because it’s very very funny and clever - only to find that the main one had been pulled off the site “due to copyright infringment.” I wonder when that happened: pre or post Google-Takeover? And is that a sign of things to come? Anyhow - this is now drifting into the Off-Topic of the WIPO Broadcasting Treaty, so I will end by saying that a lesser-viewed version of the Jon Stewart episode is here until further notice. If it goes, too, we may have to start a new YouTube (maybe YouTubeTwo?).

    Three. E-mails to the Minister of Industry Maxime Bernier and Minister of Canadian Heritage Bev Oda anyone? And pop your name onto the petition at www.neutrality.ca (and please follow the other instructions for action given there).

    Four. Thank-you, Kyenta, for the heads’ up on this one. We’re looking forward to hearing what the CIPPIC tells you…

    -SIO