On Aug 14, 2014, at 4:32 PM, William Denton <w...@pobox.com> wrote:

> At the university where I work Google Analytics is the standard, and we use 
> it on the library's web site.  There's probably no way around that---but we 
> can tell people how to block the tracking, which will help them locally 
> (ironically) and everwhere else.  (I use Piwik at home, and like it, but 
> moving to that here would be a long-term project, only partly for technical 
> reasons.)

I think a reasonable place to draw a line in the sand is "use for advertising". 
If you look at the Google Analytics site, it doesn't appear that they can use 
Analytics tracking for advertising, because they don't make the carve-outs for 
children that I believe would be required if they did. So if you trust google, 
and assume they know everything anyway, you can let them track users.

AddThis and ShareThis, on the other hand have TOS that let them use tracking 
for advertising, and that's what their business is. So, hypothetically, a teen 
could look at library catalog records for books about childbirth, and as a 
result, later be shown ads for pregnancy tests, and that would be something the 
library has permitted. 

A criminal prosecutor could subpoena either Google or AddThis/ShareThis to 
obtain tracking data for anyone in your library who had read books about Nazism 
or the Black Panthers or witchcraft,  completely without involving the library. 
Do you think Google would easily comply with that sort of request? would 
AddThis? Would EBSCO?

At Unglue.it, we use Google Analytics, but we have avoided Things like Facebook 
Like, and the third party shares because we didn't like the tradeoff.

But maybe the horse has left the barn forever.

Eric

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