Hi Erin,
We’re in a similar boat here my our library. We run our own website (Drupal) and the university runs theirs. Luckily our university has purchased a product, OneTrust<https://www.onetrust.com/products/cookies/>, as a solution to GDPR and I should be rolling it out to our sites in the coming weeks. It adds a small banner to the bottom of the site where people can either accept all cookies or read more and toggle certain ones on/off. On the other sites that it’s implemented on it seems to work and look great.
~Evan
From: [log in to unmask] [mailto:[log in to unmask]] On Behalf Of Erin White
Sent: Tuesday, May 22, 2018 1:38 PM
To: [log in to unmask]; Code for Libraries <[log in to unmask]>
Subject: [lita-l] GDPR and your library website
Hi folks,
Is anyone making changes to your library website, sub-sites, or other digital platforms in order to comply with GDPR regulations?
Bonus: if so, are you also working to increase users' awareness of how their data is collected and used across the library, not just on the web?
We're mulling a few options here. Our university-level IT group plans to launch a web click-through page before users from the EU can proceed to institutional websites, but our library servers don't fall under their control for this change.
I think this could be an opportunity for us to increase privacy awareness for all our users, rather than just EU visitors, and I've seen a few non-library websites present this info to everyone in a way that isn't obtrusive or alarming. But, I haven't gotten a sense of whether this is something other library folks are considering as well.
Thanks for anything you've got to share.
--
Erin White
Head, Digital Engagement, VCU Libraries<https://www.library.vcu.edu>
(804) 827-3552 | [log in to unmask]<mailto:[log in to unmask]>
pronoun.is/she<http://pronoun.is/she>
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