Thoughts from democracy in the dark a discussion on the impact of information control, AI and censorship

By Louise Warren

ALIA celebrated Library and Information Week from July 29th – August 2nd. This year, the ALIA team organised several online webinar chats on the 2024 theme Roots of Democracy.

On August 2nd, I attended the ALIA Library Information Week Zoom Webinar Democracy in the Dark.  

Webinar speakers included

  • Dr. Amanda Lawrence (Wikimedia),
  • Janet Catteral (Open Access Australasia)
  • Trish Hepworth (ALIA Deputy CEO)
  • Fiona Parsons (Analysis and Policy Observatory).

I attended the Library Information Week Webinars to maintain active knowledge in Libraries and gain insights from speakers on the introduction of large language models back in October, which had created a flurry of discussion about what it could be.

Speakers came from the library industry and had in-depth knowledge of the issues surrounding access to information, highlighting issues that could arise with access to information from censorship, paywalls and the introduction of AI.

Issues with access to information included the lack of diversity needed in a collection and the lack of stories from Indigenous women and children.

Another aspect shared with many speakers was encouraging grassroots organisations to share information over the large monopolies in the publishing industry.

 

I had been aware of the open access movement through my introduction to the research unit. One reason I knew open access was so important was to allow everyone access to resources so they could learn from it and improve on information. It was good to hear perspectives from Open Access Australia and Analysis and Policy Observatory, who spoke about access to published material in Australia.  They both had equal aims but differed in terms of what they collected. I learnt from Fiona from Analysis and Policy Observatory that their collection was a mass of grey literature, and what was a challenge for those documents, which are vital for the notion of government, was that information was largely inaccessible to most people.

Janet from Open Access Australasia discussed that open access has been moving away from published scholarly work and focused on looking at non-traditional research to provide breadth of knowledge.

 

During the meeting, speakers discussed asking for a person’s age before engaging in websites could be a potential issue.

Janet mentioned the upcoming changes proposed by the UNESCO Digital Compact. In more detail, Dr Amanda Laurence explained that the digital compact is a unilateral way of looking at the elements of open access and will be a point of focus for many counties and generations.

 

The final topic was about AI and what might lay ahead for collections. Janet initially replied terrifyingly. They were aware that ChatGPT was often a cause of truth decay and dissemination of misinformation. Trish said it was okay to calmly and slowly engage with AI to learn how to use resources ethically.

References:

ALIA. (2024, August 2nd). Democracy in The Dark. . Zoom.

United Nations. (n.d.). Global Digital Compact.

You can now view the Draft Program for ALIA Information Online 2025 – Transformation & Disruption.

Interested in attending? Register via this the ALIA Information Online Event link.

RSVP Date: 17th March

Cost:

Members $400 | Non-Members $500| Institution  5 attendees $1800 | Institution 10 attendees $3500 | Unlimited $6000

 

One Day ALIA Member Price (includes ALIA personal members and institutional staff members): $150

One Day Non-Member Price: $200

Two Day ALIA Member Price (includes personal members and institutional staff members): $275

Two Day Non-Member Price: $375

 

 

When  is this on?

Tuesday 18th March – 20th March

Location: Online via Zoom 

Time Zoom begins: 9am AEDT

 

Program Summary:

Day 1: Tuesday, 18th March – Indigenous Knowledges (Program highlights Dialogue Session: Libraries and their Intersection with Indigenous Knowledges held on 13th October 2024).

Day 2: Wednesday, 19th March – Greening GLAMR

Day 3: Thursday, 20th March – AI

Download the Draft Program for more info.

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Poster reads draft program for Alia information online is available.

The Truck Cat Simultaneous StoryTime

Now is the time to find yourself a copy of The Truck Cat by Deborah Frenkel from your local book shop, library or department store.

Save the date for #librarystorytime on May 21st from 12pm – 1pm (AEST).

A man pats a cat on the head. A truck is behind him.

ALIA CPD Scheme Skills Audit Focus Group EOI

Are you an ALIA Student or Graduate Member?

Add to your ALIA CPD Scheme hours by joining the ALIA CPD Scheme Skills Audit Focus Group.

ALIA are in the process of reviewing the ALIA CPD Scheme to meet the ALIA Skills, Knowledge and ethics Framework.

As a member of the ALIA CPD Scheme focus group you can provide feedback on gaps in library skills in the Library and Information Service Workforce.

The Focus Group will begin in March. You can add the 2-3 hours contributing to the Focus Group as ALIA CPD Scheme hours.

Interested?

Email education@alia.org.au with the subject line ‘Skills Audits Focus Group’ to let the team know your interest in participating.

The front of the Ngutungka Henley library. South Australia's newest library.

RSVP by 12 February to join ALIA SA on their library tour of Ngutungka Henley Library.

When: Thursday, 13 February 2025

Location: 

Ngutungka Henley
378 Seaview Road
Henley Beach, SA 5022

Time: 6pm – 7pm (ACDT)

Cost: ALIA Members & Non – Members: FREE

Stay updated on ALIA SNGG, ALIA Special Interest Group (SIG) & ALIA News by bookmarking our ALIA SNGG Newsletter WordPress page.

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