Politech mailing list archives

FC: Library filtering use doubles in two years, report says


From: Declan McCullagh <declan () well com>
Date: Mon, 25 Sep 2000 13:41:32 -0700

[This is from David Burt, a longtime filtering-everything advocate who is now an employee of a filtering software vendor. --Declan

*******

From: "David Burt" <dburt () n2h2 com>
To: "James S. Tyre" <jstyre () jstyre com>, "Hudsond@Fac. Org" <hudsond () fac org>,
        "Declan McCullagh" <declan () well com>, <kaplanc () nytimes com>
Subject: Library Filters use nearly doubles in two years
Date: Sat, 23 Sep 2000 14:07:28 -0700

The Mainstream Loudoun ruling almost certainly slowed filtering down (based on plenty of anecdotal evidence), but it certainly hasn't stopped library filtering. See below article, and table 11 of the attached .pdf, which says:

Public Libraries using filtering: 3,711 or 24.6 %
Public libraries filtering all access: 1,445 or 9.6%
Public libraries filtering some access: 2,265 or 15.0%

September 25, 2000

Study: PL Net Access Rises; Filtering Up
<http://www.libraryjournal.com/articles/news/thisweek/20000925_15930.asp>http://www.libraryjournal.com/articles/news/thisweek/20000925_15930.asp

The National Commission on Libraries and Information Science (NCLIS) has released <http://www.nclis.gov/statsurv/1998plo.pdf>Public Libraries and the Internet 2000, which follows up on the 1998 Public Libraries and the Internet study, both conducted by Florida State University academics. John Carlo Bertot and Charles R. McClure.

The study shows that the Internet has remained and grown as a vital public library service, as Internet connectivity in public libraries is at 95.7%, up from 83.6% reported in 1998 and with virtually all of those that are connected providing patron access. In two years, public library outlets have nearly doubled the number of public access workstations, and libraries are steadily gaining in speed of connectivity. While the percentage increase in connectivity over two years may not seem dramatic, Bertot pointed out that urban, suburban, and rural libraries are now connected nearly equally.

While the study states that "75.5% of public library outlets do not block and/or filter Internet content," that formulation obscures what seems to be a not insignificant trend toward filtering. In 1998, only14.6% of libraries reported using filters, while a <http://www.libraryjournal.com/articles/news/thisweek/20000710_15197.asp>2000 survey by the Library Research Center of the University of Illinois said that 16.8% of libraries use filters. The 24.5% figure in the new study includes 9.6% of libraries that are filtering all workstations -- a legally questionable position, at least based on the 1998 decision in the litigation involving the Loudoun County Public Library, Leesburg, VA.

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