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August 18, 2004

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Sorry to post twice. This is the question directly from our IT folks about concerns of legal liability in a wireless library:

If we have an open and unrestricted wireless network, where there is no login, no tracking or recording of what student’s access or who the students are, then what is the legal liability of the college, if any, if students engage in illegal activities while on this open wireless network? For example, if they engage in hacking, spamming, breaking into gov’t.sites or financial records, traffic in illegal material such as child pornography and this activity is traced back to the school by the authorities, but we have no records of who might have engaged in such activities., does the legal liability fall upon the school itself and can the school itself be taken to task for what would essentially become untraceable crimes? If it is the case that the school is responsible, what individuals would generally be held accountable?

Our small community college library is about to go wireless. Our IT folks are concerned that our college will have some sort of legal liability if patrons use their laptops to download illegal material or hack into government sites and cause mischief.

Does anyone know if the institution can be held liable in a wireless environment in a library?

Mary's article is right on target. I would think (being a non-lawyer) that the OSP safe harbor provisions of the DMCA should protect a library offering wireless service from charges of liability for contributory or vicarious infringement.

Law and policy don't always mix, however. Universities have been hauled before Congress because they haven't taken responsibility for illegal filesharing by students (even though the law in principle shields universities, and even though most file sharing is done on commercial, not university, networks). In response, universities have fallen over themselves to assume responsibility for the actions of their students. So while I don't see much in the way of legal liabilities (so long as you are truly unaware about what people are doing), there is also an underlying threat of political pressue to consider.

Take a look at

Library Copyright Liability and Pirating Patrons
in California Libraries May 2001 (Vol. 11 No. 5).

http://www.cla-net.org/resources/articles/minow_pirating.php

(I think I hotlinked it under MARY in this post, if I understand how typepad/html works)

I'd like to be as open as possible, but would I be exposing the library to any copyright infringement liability of patrons were allowed to use the library's Internet connection to download protected materials, such as software, music, or videos?

If we have no liability, then the only concerns are technical and/or security.

Mike Dargan

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