[IP] Library card? Check. Fingerprint? Really?
Begin forwarded message:
From: Don Drake <don@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Date: May 20, 2005 12:09:06 PM EDT
To: dave@xxxxxxxxxx
Subject: Library card? Check. Fingerprint? Really?
For IP…
From today’s Chicago Tribune, a suburban library will require a
fingerprint to use computers. This is crazy.
http://www.chicagotribune.com/technology/
chi-0505200366may20,1,4613732.story?coll=chi-news-hed
Donald Drake
President
Drake Consulting
http://www.drakeconsult.com/
312-560-1574
Here’s the article:
Library card? Check. Fingerprint? Really?
Citing security, Naperville libraries will make patrons prove their
identities before using computers. Privacy advocates fear misuse of
the data.
By James Kimberly
Tribune staff reporter
Published May 20, 2005
Before long, patrons wanting to use Naperville Public Library System
computers without a hassle will have to prove their identity with a
fingerprint.
The three-library system this week signed a $40,646 contract with a
local company, U.S. Biometrics Corp., to install fingerprint scanners
on 130 computers with Internet access or a time limit on usage.
The decision, according to the American Library Association, makes
Naperville only the second library system in the country to install
fingerprint scanners.
Library officials say the added security is necessary to ensure
people who are using the computers are who they say they are.
Officials promise to protect the confidentiality of the fingerprint
records.
But with Congress contemplating an expansion of the USA Patriot Act,
which gives federal authorities access to confidential library
records, and cameras watching the streets some Chicagoans drive or
the sidewalks they stroll, privacy advocates are concerned about yet
another erosion of personal liberty.
"We take people's fingerprints because we think they might be guilty
of something, not because they want to use the library," said Ed
Yohnka, spokesman for the American Civil Liberties Union of Illinois.
Yohnka said Naperville may mean well, but that does not mean the
technology won't be used for something else at a later date.
"You're creating just another database of information about people,"
Yohnka said. "I'm sure they started out with the best of intentions
of not sharing this information, but the reality is sometimes
intentions go awry."
Currently patrons use their library cards and personal identification
numbers to access the computers.
That will change once the scanners are installed. The glass-topped,
silver metal boxes about the size of a package of Tic-Tacs read the
print on a patron's index finger and use an algorithm to convert at
least 15 specific points into a unique numeric sequence.
Once a patron's fingerprint has been recorded, accessing a computer
will require only the touch of a finger.
Library Deputy Director Mark West said the system will be implemented
over the summer beginning with a public education campaign in June.
West said he is confident the public will embrace the technology once
it learns its limitations.
The stored numeric data cannot be used to reconstruct a fingerprint,
West said, nor can it be cross-referenced with other fingerprint
databases such as those kept by the FBI or the Illinois State Police.
"Right now we give you a library card with a bar code attached to it.
This is just a bar code, but it's built in," West said.
Last May, when Naperville police demanded the account information of
a man who had fondled himself in front of teenagers while viewing
pornography in the computer lab at Nichols Library, the library
refused to release the information without a subpoena, citing the
Illinois Library Records Confidentiality Act.
Naperville police obtained the subpoena and later arrested Richard
Blaszak, 35, of Naperville.
In January, Blaszak pleaded guilty to public indecency and was
sentenced to 2 years of probation. He is prohibited by court order
from using computers in DuPage County libraries during his probation.
During the investigation of the incident, library officials
discovered that many patrons logged onto library computers using
library cards and passwords of friends or relatives. That
realization, coupled with a new library policy that allows parents to
install automatic Internet filters on their children's accounts,
prompted the search for better computer security, West said.
West said he had to be convinced that the technology would protect
patron privacy before he would recommend it to the Library Board.
"Confidentiality and privacy [are] my middle name," West said.
West said the library is requiring a fingerprint to set up computer
access, although patrons who object could ask a staff member to log
them on to a computer.
"I'm sure we won't turn anybody away who refuses to use the
technology, but in all honesty, it will be more cumbersome," West said.
The American Library Association said only one other system uses
fingerprint-scanning technology: the Buffalo-Erie County Library
System, a collection of 52 public libraries that serves 400,000
people in upstate New York.
Ann Kling, support services manager, said the library launched a
fingerprint recognition program at the main library in downtown
Buffalo in 2001.
The library offers fingerprint scans as an optional replacement for
library cards. The system is limited to the library in downtown
Buffalo and consequently only 1,787 patrons use it, Kling said.
Because the use of the technology is so limited, American Library
Association officials said the organization has not taken an official
stand on it.
Deborah Caldwell-Stone, deputy director of the ALA's office of
intellectual freedom, acknowledged that requiring a fingerprint scan
might dissuade some people from using library computers.
"There are going to be folks who come from different political
situations, folks who come out of Central Europe who have had a
history of living under authoritative regimes who may not be
comfortable with this," Caldwell-Stone said.
But Caldwell-Stone said libraries already collect all kinds of
personal information from patrons and at some point must be trusted
to protect it.
U.S. Biometrics President Dave Delgrosso said his company's
technology is seeping into the mainstream, popping up in banks,
hospitals and other institutions where exact identifications are
important.
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