Wednesday, January 14, 2009

Pulling at your friend strings.

The TechRepublic recently posted a blog concerning social networking sites and possible illicit use. The author and IT pro, Tom Olzak, emphasizes the potential security risks to businesses and sensitive information. Rather than focus on the obvious hack and attack on Facebook or Myspace servers, Olzak recasts the hack in a more insidious light. In essence, hackers may prey on psychology rather than code to extract information. Olzak cites the points made in a Psychology Today article about our friendship bonding psychology. Adding a person to your Facebook friends list is an act of sharing and initiates a process of friendship. Sharing progressively more sensitive information, personal or otherwise, is part of our friendship building psychology. Social hackers could tug at those behavioral strings by sharing seemingly sensitive information and an unsuspecting "friend" reciprocates to strengthen the friendship. Group identity, another important aspect of friendship, is also easily manufactured in a virtual environment. As with social networking sites, a user simply joins various groups of common interests. Visual cues of dishonesty are lost in a virtual environment as well as the physical dynamic of group interactions. From an IT professional perspective, human behavior is more of a threat to a network's security than code hackers, in the case of social networking sites.

In a library environment, librarians educate users about potential hazards to their privacy on a regular basis. Librarians talk yarns about data collection by Facebook, 3rd party applications with avenues for further data collection and the direct attack on social networking servers. Those methods driven by hefty terminology and number crunching easily washes over any user, especially adolescents and teens. A more personal approach to patron privacy may mean more to the users. Setting up boundaries on social networking sites would go much further than suggesting the whole site is dangerous or blocking it outright. Librarians could suggest that patrons ask themselves the same questions about a virtual person as they do a person they've met; "Do I know this person?," "How well do I know this person?," "Who else do I know that knows this person?," "What do other people think of this person?," etc.

As Olzak points out, "behavior is what it is" and to hinder patrons from using social networking sites is futile. Keeping patrons informed and educated about social networking, as with other resources, is the best approach libraries can offer.

Wednesday, December 17, 2008

Consensus in Academic Research

Online Resources Produce Myopia in Academia

Time strapped students, researchers and librarians alike find electronic resources invaluable in day to day academic needs. From a librarian's perspective, online articles are indexed in myriad of ways and therefore linked and searchable in any number of ways. With online searching Librarians can better serve patrons by finding information faster and more efficiently, to the delight of students and researchers alike. For the most part print is dead.

But, despite the efficiency, online resources may contribute to "group think" in academia, according to a study in Science. James Evans from the Sociology department at the University Chicago conducted a survey study on academic citations. The author begins from the premise that, in libraries, print use is decreasing. He uses citation statistics to then discover the effect of articles available online from conventional journals. In theory, Evans poses, the availability of scholarship online would broaden works cited in an academic paper. However, the citation data suggests otherwise.

In fact, access to conventional journals online, narrows the scope of works cited in academic research. Significantly, online indexing of articles allows researchers to assess "prevailing opinion," or number of times an article is cited, in a given field. (Evans 398) Even though archived articles enter a database, researchers tend to select recent scholarship over past articles, selecting articles directly related to their research rather than those articles marginally related. Evans also points out that scientists are also browsing topics with online searches instead of perusing print sources.

The author sums up, inspired by a New York Times article on the subject of higher education. "Modern graduate education parallels this shift in [scholarly] publication -- shorter in years, more specialized in scope, culminating less frequently in a true dissertation than an album of articles." (Evans 398) Evans suggests that even though print is cumbersomeness, it may provide a better means to access past research for scientists and students, and I would add Librarians. Perusing print forces researchers to examine articles less related to the topic at hand. In this way, works cited are expanded and so too are the ideas of researchers.


Evans, James, A. "Electronic Publication and the Narrowing of Science and Scholarship." Science. 321.5887 (2008): 395 - 399.

Monday, November 24, 2008

Clearing the Air

The FCC, on November 4th, approved the deregulation of unused television frequencies. As many of us know, current analog television transmissions will switch to digital in 2009 which will allow for repurposing the broadcast spectrum. These frequencies, also called "white spaces," are robust enough to carry a broadband internet connection, but before the FCC ruling, remained restricted from development. Most of the issues on the use of white space concerned interference with operating broadcast channels and the interests of current broadband providers. Technology has since caught up and allows for interference-free use, one of the stipulations for approving the measure by the FCC.

Now broadband internet access can potentially become a truly wireless service, rather than rare Wi-Fi hot spots at your local cafe. Rural communities especially will benefit from wireless access where the wire based broadband infrastructure has yet to be built. Without the need for wires broadband internet access will cost less to build and will pass savings onto the consumer. The FCC ruling will ultimately increase competition in the market and expand broadband access.

Rural areas sorely lacking from broadband access can now rejoice. Without the restrictions of wires and unwilling companies, broadband internet access can now enter remote areas. Wireless broadband will be both convenient and cheap. For the rural communities wireless broadband access will end the disenfranchisement from the information age.