Hi Tammy, 

Thank you for asking this question.  It's been interesting hearing other 
institution's take on this Extension.  I did an initial assessment a little 
while back for Ohio State, and after downloading the Firefox version, took it 
apart to do a quick security audit (we have to go through this for every 
software product; both an audit for security and accessible) and the biggest 
challenge with the plugin is the active data collection/processing across 
remote servers and the ease in which you can probe the APIs for data collected. 
 I realize that it would complicate the extension, but to make this work within 
my environment, more data processing needs to moved locally so less user data 
is moving back and forth.  As an organization, there has been a real push to 
limit the recommended use of software or tools that essentially vacuum up all 
user data.  It's one thing for a user to download a plugin themselves, but 
would be difficult within our security environment to make it part of the 
default student/faculty software profile.  

But it's a really interesting product and one that I go back and look at 
regularly to weight the pros and cons of potentially pursuing an exception to 
our security process.

--tr

-----Original Message-----
From: Code for Libraries <[email protected]> On Behalf Of Emily 
Morton-Owens
Sent: Wednesday, August 22, 2018 9:45 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [CODE4LIB] Lean Library Security Concerns

Hi Tammy,

At Penn we are starting a trial period for Lean Library which has come about 
only after extensive testing and discussion about whether the risks of the 
product are balanced by the benefits. I won't recap the back and forth but we 
ultimately decided that our security/privacy concerns could apply to browser 
extensions/add-ons in general and weren't specific to Lean Library, that Lean 
Library's business model doesn't rely on exploiting the sensitive data, and 
that Lean Library would ameliorate what we see as a particular pain point for 
users. Therefore we have decided to go ahead with the pilot but will present it 
with a disclaimer about what it means to install extensions in general.

Regards,
Emily
AUL Digital Library Development & Systems Penn Libraries

On Tue, Aug 21, 2018 at 6:05 PM Tammy Wolf <[email protected]> wrote:

> I just wondered if anyone else on this list reviewed Lean Library<mailto:
> https://www.leanlibrary.com/> and had any security and/or privacy 
> concerns.
>
> Here is what our Director of Security had to say,
>
> "I can confirm that browsing activity is sent to lean library. 
> Attached is an example screenshot showing the POST when visiting a URL on 
> reddit.com.
> And if you visit https://app.leanlibrary.com/?r=api/api/institutes 
> it's trivial to see info about all subscribers of lean library.
>
> Also, there are Repeated Pings to capture user IP Address. This was 
> also verified during the session capture. This occurs via 
> https://app.leanlibrary.com/?r=api/api/getIp.";
>
> Our Security Director goes on to say the following:
>
> "Of course this is also a question of consent. Any users of the plugin 
> should first have to consent to the privacy policy:
> https://www.leanlibrary.com/privacy-policy/item181 - which would be in 
> conflict with deploying this automatically to lab computers. I have 
> some issues with the privacy policy itself as well. It states:
>
> What information does Lean Library and The Extension NOT obtain?
> Your security and privacy is our biggest priority. We are only 
> interested in information or data that can help us deliver the best 
> experience possible in saving you time while and optimizing your academic 
> research.
> Therefore, The Extension does not store any information for other 
> browsing activity such as activity on non-database webpage urls.
> Maybe they aren't technically "storing" the fact that I visited a URL 
> on reddit.com, but that visit still went to their server and was 
> captured / analyzed *somehow*. It would be more accurate for them to 
> say that they analyze all sites you visit to determine whether they 
> are academic in nature, or something. But that would be a red flag."
>
> Thoughts?
>
> Tammy Allgood Wolf
> Director of Discovery Services
> ASU Library
> Arizona State University
> 480-965-1797
>

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