Difference between revisions of "Main Page/Crash Courses/Systems and Policies/Week five"

From Library Freedom Wiki Page
Jump to navigation Jump to search
 
(7 intermediate revisions by 2 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
Working with IT to protect patron privacy, cybersecurity basics
+
=== Week 5: Talking about privacy ===
 
+
* Real time lecture: March 29th 8:30 Pacific/11:30 Eastern on Zoom https://zoom.us/j/9129428892  
Understanding some of the IT environments possible, talking points for different things people say, things IT people typically bring up
 
 
 
 
 
=== Week 9: Working with IT to protect privacy ===
 
* Real time lecture May 4th 11 Pacific/2 Eastern on Zoom: https://zoom.us/j/9129428892  
 
  
 
==== Overview ====
 
==== Overview ====
As we try to shift to a privacy-centric culture in our libraries, it's vital that we build relationships with stakeholders like IT and administration to adopt privacy best practices. This week, we'll hear from Becky Yoose, Library Data Privacy Consultant at LDH consulting, on how to leverage relationships to get the support and resources for making privacy happen at your library. Becky will present on this topic, then address questions and experiences from our "working with IT/admin" thread on the messageboard.  
+
As we try to shift to a privacy-centric culture in our libraries, it's vital that we build relationships with stakeholders like IT and administration to adopt privacy best practices. But the first step is learning the right kind of language to use to make convincing pro-privacy arguments. Part of making the case for privacy involves putting it in terms that the stakeholder cares about, for example, admin tends to respond well to ideas that fit within strategic planning directives; IT tends to be more in favor of making library infrastructures secure. We'll talk about different strategies that can be effective in convincing different stakeholder groups, helping them understand why privacy is so important, and why libraries are the right places to focus on privacy. We'll also cover common anti-privacy arguments and ways to counter them.  
  
 
==== Readings ====
 
==== Readings ====
No readings this week. Contribute to this thread instead: https://libraryfreedom.chat/t/talking-to-it-and-admin-about-privacy-whats-your-experience/593
+
No readings this week, instead, contribute to this thread: https://libraryfreedom.chat/t/cc-3-talking-points/952
 
 
==== Guest lecturer ====
 
Becky Yoose, [https://ldhconsultingservices.com/ LDH Consulting Services]
 
  
 
==== Discussion ====
 
==== Discussion ====
TBD
+
https://libraryfreedom.chat/t/cc-3-talking-points/952
  
 
==== Tasks ====  
 
==== Tasks ====  
* Lecture, readings, discussion forum, and final project work
+
* Lecture,discussion forum, and final project work

Latest revision as of 22:55, 23 March 2022

Week 5: Talking about privacy[edit]

Overview[edit]

As we try to shift to a privacy-centric culture in our libraries, it's vital that we build relationships with stakeholders like IT and administration to adopt privacy best practices. But the first step is learning the right kind of language to use to make convincing pro-privacy arguments. Part of making the case for privacy involves putting it in terms that the stakeholder cares about, for example, admin tends to respond well to ideas that fit within strategic planning directives; IT tends to be more in favor of making library infrastructures secure. We'll talk about different strategies that can be effective in convincing different stakeholder groups, helping them understand why privacy is so important, and why libraries are the right places to focus on privacy. We'll also cover common anti-privacy arguments and ways to counter them.

Readings[edit]

No readings this week, instead, contribute to this thread: https://libraryfreedom.chat/t/cc-3-talking-points/952

Discussion[edit]

https://libraryfreedom.chat/t/cc-3-talking-points/952

Tasks[edit]

  • Lecture,discussion forum, and final project work