New Report From EveryLibrary Institute: “Library Patron Privacy in the Age of Artificial Intelligence”

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DWD Featured Image Feb 9, 2026
DWD Featured Image Feb 9, 2026

From EveryLibrary Institute:

As libraries across the United States rapidly adopt artificial intelligence tools and digital services, longstanding assumptions about patron confidentiality are being tested in new and urgent ways. Library Patron Privacy in the Age of Artificial Intelligence” is an analysis examining how existing state library privacy laws intersect with emerging AI technologies, third-party data practices, and the realities of modern digital library services.

Produced by Lucie Daignault, Samuel Lim, and Catherine Ferri of the Georgetown University Communications and Technology Law Clinic in collaboration with the EveryLibrary Institute, this report surveys all fifty states and the District of Columbia to assess how current library patron privacy laws may or may not protect readers, researchers, and library users in the AI era. The paper explores the implications of generative AI, data retention, vendor relationships, digital circulation systems, and the growing tension between technological innovation and the constitutional and ethical obligations libraries have long upheld.

The paper includes a detailed, state-by-state, contemporaneous survey of state laws intended to inform librarians, trustees, policymakers, researchers, advocates, technologists, and anyone concerned with the future of intellectual freedom and privacy. The paper is designed to help start and deepen conversations across the library, legal, civic technology, and public policy communities. The rapid evolution of artificial intelligence requires libraries and their partners to think proactively about privacy, confidentiality, free expression, and the role of trusted public institutions in a data-driven society.

Direct to Full Text Report
(61 pages; PDF)

The post New Report From EveryLibrary Institute: “Library Patron Privacy in the Age of Artificial Intelligence” appeared first on Library Journal infoDOCKET.

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