Hi there,

This is something I've been thinking about a lot in the past few weeks.


I don't think librarians necessarily give people the "right answers" (what does 
it mean for an answer to be "right", anyway?). Sure, not everything on the 
Internet is true, but not everything that came from a librarian's mouth or a 
book is true, either. Humans are frequently wrong no matter which medium 
they're using to reach an audience.

Libraries don't provide the "right" answers -- they provide *different* answers 
through a different lens, and that's what's important.


Quoting what I told a colleague earlier this week: There are major perks to the 
fact that libraries are NOT Google. Our motivations are vastly different from 
Google's, and this makes all the difference.

We do not track our patrons. We do not record their every move and sell that 
information to advertisers.

We do not bias their search results based on previous behavior. We do not 
filter or limit the information they can find based on what we or our 
algorithms think they might like. We don't build profiles to guess at their 
demographic and skew the materials we give them to reaffirm their preexisting 
beliefs. Patrons can come to the library and search for knowledge in peace, 
separate from the baggage of the Internet's pervasive tracking data and 
invasive profiling.

We are neutral in the services we provide, and that is invaluable in the age of 
personalization.


If you have the time for a quick read, you'll find Eli Pariser's "The Filter 
Bubble: What the Internet is Hiding From 
You<https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/10596103-the-filter-bubble>" to be very 
relevant.

Best,

-- Ivan Goldsmith
Front End Developer

Penn Libraries Web Unit

________________________________________
From: Code for Libraries <CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU> on behalf of Cornel Darden 
Jr. <corneldarde...@gmail.com>
Sent: Friday, April 1, 2016 12:31 AM
To: CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU
Subject: [CODE4LIB] Google can give you answers, but librarians give you the 
right answers

Hello,

"Google can give you answers, but librarians give you the right answers."

Is it me? Or is there something wrong with this statement?

I've been hearing statements like this since I've been in the field. Tonight I 
saw a public library post on FB:

Library: "because not everything on the internet is true"

Some people applauded the statement and were like: "yay librarians!"

Others thought it was a very ignorant statement. And many patrons caused a huge 
backlash. It was interesting as the library responded to the irritated patrons.

Thoughts?

Thanks,

Cornel Darden Jr.
Chief Information Officer
Casanova Information Services, LLC
Office Phone: (779) 205-3105
Mobile Phone: (708) 705-2945

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