Productivity & Social Software

The big story today was the Ontario government’s banning of Facebook from staff computers. I do not really know how this impacts Ontario libraries yet.  I hope not much, because in my view having a “no facebook” policy in libraries is kind of like having a “no cooking” policy in restaurants.

That said, it would be very easy for me to go the “just say yes” route, but I can see some ways in which a wholesale ban of a particular website could be justified.

First of all, I should admit that if my employer turned facebook off right now, it would have little impact on my life. I use facebook sparingly at best. Turning off YouTube would frustrate the heck out of me, because videos like this, this and this (and this one I just discovered by searching for the URLs of the other three — way to go Calgary!) have been extremely helpful in getting my point across about what blogs, wikis and social softwares are all about. That said, it wouldn’t be the end of the world, because I would just send the relevant information from home. They could then (ironically) get on a public computer and view it themselves.

Anyway, I am hoping and praying that the Ontario Facebook decision was one that was carried out with considerable reservations because they had an obvious productivity problem. There is evidence that this is the case. For one, they did not ban MySpace. I know, I know. . . some of you out there might say “well, that’s just because they don’t understand what social software is.” Well, here is my thought (or hope). They have folks who are using Facebook on staff time and not getting their work done; therefore, they ban Facebook to thwart the addiction and get the productivity jump. This is a reasonable move in my view, provided that Ontario has found that a serious problem exists.

You’d think, though, that the Ontario bureaucracy had always been a paragon of *Ahem* productivity until Facebook came along and destroyed all that.

Anyway, here are some things that I hope Ontario thought about before they banned Facebook.

I am going to try and give the Ontario government the benefit of the doubt here, but I am skeptical that real fore-thought has gone into this decision.   Hard-lined restrictions on IT lines have never really been an effective way to deal with most social problems.   I hope the folks in Ontario at least look towards tweaking into a compromise about this site.


Kaynak : http://otherlibrarian.wordpress.com/2007/05/03/productivity-social-software/

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