Third-Party Tracking in Online Public Library Environments in the United States and Canada: A Statistical Analysis

IF 0.4 Q4 INFORMATION SCIENCE & LIBRARY SCIENCE
David Dettman
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

A Review of:Gardner, G. J. (2021). Aiding and abetting: Third-party tracking and (in)secure connections in public libraries. The Serials Librarian, 81(1), 69–87.  https://doi.org/10.1080/0361526X.2021.1943105 Objective – To determine through statistical data collection the frequency of tracking by third parties in online public library environments along with the visibility and ease of discovery of online library policies and disclosures related to third-party tracking in particular and data privacy in general. Design – Online evaluation of public library websites. Setting – English-language public libraries in the United States and Canada. Subjects – 178 public library websites (133 in the United States and 45 in Canada). The libraries included in the study were intentionally selected for their membership in either the Canadian Urban Libraries Council (CULC) or the Urban Libraries Council (ULC) in the Unites States, since these libraries have some of the largest systems membership serving predominantly urban and suburban communities in both countries. The included Canadian libraries serve nearly 41% of the population in that country while the included libraries in the United States are positioned to serve 28% percent of the total population. The author notes that “These percentage figures serve as hypothetical, upper-bound estimates of the population affected by third-party tracking since not every member of these communities actually uses their local public library” (Gardner, 2021, p.72). Methods – In addition to evaluating the public library catalog and website in general with regards to third-party tracking and data privacy, 10 common content sources (databases) available at all of the included libraries were also included in the examination. Two browser add-ons designed to detect third-party tracking, Ghostery and Disconnect, were used in the study due to their popularity and incorporation into previous similar studies. In addition to third-party tracking the author executed word searches on library homepages using Ctrl-F for words commonly used to denote privacy or terms of use statements. No qualitative analysis was performed to determine if information shared regarding third-party tracking was accurate, and subpages were not examined. The data collection period lasted a total of three months beginning in March 2017 and running through May 2017. Main Results – The data gathered between March and May of 2017 clearly indicates a general disregard among most sampled public libraries regarding the protection of patron data gathered by third-party tracking. Of Canadian libraries included in the sample 89% (40) enabled third-party tracking, while libraries in the United States allowed it at a rate of 87% (116). Both Ghostery and Disconnect revealed an almost identical number of incidences of third-party tracking in library catalogs and in the 10 popular public library databases examined in the study. Certain OPACS were associated with higher tracking counts as were certain library databases. Libraries were found to be lax when it came to providing a link on the homepage potentially informing users of the presence of third-party tracking. Of the 156 total libraries with third-party tracking in their online catalogs, 69 (44%) included a homepage link while the rest did not. The author notes that the presence of a link was all that was examined, and not specific language used to disclose the level of third-party tracking or data privacy. In total, 8 of the 10 common content sources allowed third-party tracking. All 10 provided a link to either privacy or terms of service statements on their landing pages. Conclusion – Although patron privacy is an issue addressed in the American Library Association (ALA) Code of Ethics (American Library Association, 2021), the author concludes that “Together with previous research on usage of privacy-enhancing tools in public libraries, these results suggest that public libraries are accessories to third-party tracking on a large scale” (Gardner, 2021, p.69).
美国和加拿大在线公共图书馆环境中的第三方追踪:统计分析
评介:Gardner, g.j.(2021)。协助和教唆:第三方跟踪和(在)公共图书馆的安全连接。丛书馆员,81(1),69-87。https://doi.org/10.1080/0361526X.2021.1943105Objective -通过统计数据收集确定在线公共图书馆环境中第三方跟踪的频率,以及在线图书馆政策的可见性和发现的便利性,特别是与第三方跟踪和数据隐私相关的披露。设计-公共图书馆网站的在线评估。环境-美国和加拿大的英语公共图书馆。科目:178个公共图书馆网站(美国133个,加拿大45个)。研究中包括的图书馆被有意地选择为加拿大城市图书馆理事会(CULC)或美国城市图书馆理事会(ULC)的成员,因为这些图书馆拥有一些最大的系统成员,主要服务于两国的城市和郊区社区。入选的加拿大图书馆为该国近41%的人口提供服务,而入选的美国图书馆为总人口的28%提供服务。作者指出,“这些百分比数字是对受第三方跟踪影响的人口的假设上限估计,因为并非这些社区的每个成员都实际使用当地的公共图书馆”(Gardner, 2021,第72页)。方法-除了评估公共图书馆目录和网站在第三方跟踪和数据隐私方面的总体情况外,所有被纳入的图书馆中可用的10个常见内容源(数据库)也被纳入检查范围。研究中使用了两个用于检测第三方跟踪的浏览器插件,Ghostery和Disconnect,因为它们很受欢迎,并且与之前的类似研究相结合。除了第三方跟踪之外,作者还使用Ctrl-F在图书馆主页上搜索通常用于表示隐私或使用条款声明的单词。没有进行定性分析来确定关于第三方跟踪的共享信息是否准确,也没有检查子页面。数据收集期从2017年3月开始持续三个月,一直持续到2017年5月。主要结果- 2017年3月至5月收集的数据清楚地表明,大多数抽样公共图书馆普遍无视第三方跟踪收集的用户数据的保护。在样本中的加拿大图书馆中,89%(40家)启用了第三方跟踪,而美国图书馆的这一比例为87%(116家)。Ghostery和Disconnect都显示,在图书馆目录和10个受欢迎的公共图书馆数据库中,第三方跟踪的发生率几乎相同。某些OPACS与较高的跟踪计数相关联,某些图书馆数据库也是如此。图书馆被发现在主页上提供链接时很松懈,可能会通知用户第三方跟踪的存在。在156个在线目录中有第三方跟踪的图书馆中,69个(44%)包含主页链接,其余的没有。作者指出,所检查的只是链接的存在,而不是使用特定的语言来披露第三方跟踪或数据隐私的水平。总的来说,10个常见内容源中有8个允许第三方跟踪。这10家公司都在登陆页面上提供了隐私或服务条款声明的链接。结论——尽管读者隐私是美国图书馆协会(ALA)道德准则(American Library Association, 2021)中提到的一个问题,但作者得出的结论是,“结合之前对公共图书馆使用隐私增强工具的研究,这些结果表明,公共图书馆是大规模第三方跟踪的附属品”(Gardner, 2021, p.69)。
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来源期刊
Evidence Based Library and Information Practice
Evidence Based Library and Information Practice INFORMATION SCIENCE & LIBRARY SCIENCE-
CiteScore
0.80
自引率
12.50%
发文量
44
审稿时长
12 weeks
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