Recently Asked Questions
Displaying 16 - 20 of 23
| Question | Submission Date |
|---|---|
|
Background checks and fingerprinting for new employees
My questions involve background checks for potential new employees, fingerprinting, developing policies, procedures, and best practices. |
|
|
Online posting of area drone pictures
One of our member libraries has asked me the following question: |
|
|
Archiving images of minors in organizational online collections
Our archive was part of a regional project to initiate, scan, and make available church records from predominantly African American churches within a city. As part of this project, student/graduate assistants went to the particular churches, scanned the historical records as digital files, and provided those files to [our archive] for public access. My question is in regards to photographs taken of minors and the restrictions for retention and online display. I would not have selected those particular items for retention, but because I was not on-site during the scanning, I have the files as part of the larger record (church programs, organizational records, committees, etc.). We have signed permissions from the church administration for online access and display of their records. In some cases the photographs are from over 20-40 years ago, in some cases they're much more recent. They're taken at private church events, Sunday school classes/activities, and public events--some as part of photo albums and some as individual files. I'm struggling with how to treat these photographs and any associated records when I know they display minors. Any advice or direction would be greatly appreciated. |
|
|
Library Files
What recourse may a library board take, if a former director removes all library files from a library owned computer that relate to the running of the public library? |
|
|
ResearchGate, PDFs, and Copyright
ResearchGate is often a place individuals will go to snag PDFs which are typically provided by authors, not publishers. It refers to itself as a community and network for researchers to share and discuss their research with others from around the globe. ResearchGate explicitly states that they are not liable for any copyright infringement, and that the responsibility rests with the individual; it is entirely up to the individual to either post the PDF to be downloaded freely, or to send the PDF to individuals upon request. I have multiple questions surrounding the use of ResearchGate. Number one, should libraries be directing individuals to ResearchGate to ask authors for copies of their articles? Number two, should our document delivery service be providing copies of PDFs from ResearchGate to our library patrons? I am personally very hesitant to refer anyone to ResearchGate as I find most faculty researchers are not aware of who truly holds the copyright to their published articles. Thank you! |