Texas Administrative Code
Title 13 - CULTURAL RESOURCES
Part 1 - TEXAS STATE LIBRARY AND ARCHIVES COMMISSION
Chapter 1 - LIBRARY DEVELOPMENT
Subchapter E - GRANTS: ELECTRONIC ACCESS
Section 1.100 - Standards for Local Public Library Internet Access
Universal Citation: 13 TX Admin Code ยง 1.100
Current through Reg. 49, No. 38; September 20, 2024
(a) Definitions. The following words and terms, when used in this undesignated head, shall have the following meanings, unless the context clearly indicates otherwise.
(1) Administrative staff--Library staff whose
responsibilities include management or supervision.
(2) Bandwidth--The amount of data that can be
sent through a given communications circuit per second, generally expressed as
kilobits per second (Kbps).
(3)
Client--A computer system or process that requests a service of another
computer system or process (a "server") according to a specified
protocol.
(4) Dedicated
connection--A permanent, as opposed to dialup, connection between machines
established over a telephone line, including permanent virtual
circuits.
(5) Dialup connection--A
temporary, as opposed to dedicated, connection between machines established
over a telephone line using modems.
(6) Distributed system--A collection of
computers whose distribution is transparent to the user so that the system
appears as one local machine, and which usually uses a client-server
organization.
(7) Domain Name
Server or Domain Name System (DNS)--A general-purpose distributed, replicated,
data query service used on the Internet for translating host names into
Internet addresses, as specified in RFC-1034 and 1035 (DOMAIN, Domain Name
System) and RFC-974 (DNS-MX, Mail Routing and the Domain System) or their
current successor documents.
(8)
Domain name--The common suffix in a Fully Qualified Domain Name that a group of
computers share.
(9) File Transfer
Protocol (FTP)--A protocol for transferring files from one computer to another
over the Internet, as specified in RFC-959 or its current successor
document.
(10) Format of Electronic
Mail Messages (MAIL)--A format for transferring electronic mail messages from
one computer to another over the Internet, as specified in RFC-822 or its
current successor document.
(11)
Fully Qualified Domain Name (FQDN)--The full name of a computer system,
consisting of its local host name and its domain name.
(12) Gopher--A distributed document retrieval
system that started at the University of Minnesota, as defined in RFC-1432 or
its most current successor document.
(13) Graphical User Interface (GUI)--The use
of pictures rather than words to represent the input and output of a computer
program.
(14) Host name--The unique
name by which a computer is known on a network, used to identify it in
electronic information interchange.
(15) Host--A computer (including a terminal)
connected to a network.
(16)
Hypertext Markup Language (HTML)--A hypertext document format, using Standard
Generalized Markup Language, used by the World Wide Web.
(17) Hypertext Transfer Protocol (HTTP)--The
client-server TCP/IP protocol used on the World Wide Web for the exchange of
HTML documents.
(18) Internet
address--The 32-bit host address defined by the Internet Protocol in RFC-791,
usually represented in dotted decimal notation.
(19) Internet Architecture Board (IAB)--A
technical advisory group of the Internet Society chartered by the Internet
Society Trustees to provide oversight of the architecture of the Internet and
its protocols.
(20) Internet
connection--A combination of hardware, software, and telecommunications
services that allows a computer to communicate with any other computer on the
worldwide network of networks known as the Internet, and that adheres to the
required standard protocols listed in RFC-1800 or its current successor
document.
(21) Internet Protocol
(IP)--A protocol for computer telecommunications as specified in RFC-791 or its
current successor document.
(22)
Internet provider--An organization that is authorized to provide Internet
connections to other organizations.
(23) Management Information Base-II
(MIB-II)--A specification of the managed objects to be defined in a
internetwork management system as specified in RFC-1213 or its current
successor document.
(24) Network--A
hardware and software computer data communication system.
(25) Protocol--A set of formal rules
describing how to transmit data across a network.
(26) Public service staff--Library staff
whose primary responsibilities include helping library users to find and use
information or materials; pages, shelvers, circulation and clerical staff (or
others whose reference or reader's advisory duties are incidental) are not
included.
(27) Request for Comments
(RFC)--A version of an Internet specification, published as part of the
"Request for Comments" (RFC) document series, the official publication channel
for Internet standards documents and other publications of the Internet
Engineering Steering Group, Internet Architecture Board, and Internet
community.
(28) Server--A computer
system or process that provides some service for other computers ("clients")
connected to it via a network, according to a specified protocol.
(29) Simple Mail Transfer Protocol (SMTP)--A
mail transfer protocol defining an envelope to be used in delivering messages
between computers on the Internet, as specified in RFC-821 or its current
successor document.
(30) Simple
Network Management Protocol (SNMP)--A protocol for remote management and
collection of network management information as specified in RFC-1157 or its
current successor document.
(31)
Technical services staff--Library staff whose primary responsibilities include
selecting, cataloging, or indexing information or materials for the library
collection.
(32) Telnet Protocol
(TELNET)--A protocol that allows a user on one computer to login remotely to
another computer over the Internet, as specified in RFC-854 and 855 or their
current successor documents.
(33)
Text-based--Working under a non-window-based operating system, as opposed to a
graphical user interface.
(34)
Transmissions Control Protocol (TCP)--A protocol for computer
telecommunications as specified in RFC-793 or its current successor
document.
(35) Wide Area
Information Server (WAIS)--A distributed (client-server) information retrieval
system that uses a protocol defined in the American National Standards
Institute Z39.50.
(36) World Wide
Web (WWW)--An Internet client-server hypertext distributed information
retrieval system using HTTP that originated from the CERN High-Energy Physics
laboratories in Geneva, Switzerland.
(b) These standards for local public library Internet access apply to all Internet connections funded in whole or in part by the Texas State Library and Archives Commission under § 1.101 of this title (relating to Internet Assistance Grants).
(1) Internet Protocol standards. All
connections must implement TCP/IP, Telnet, File Transfer Protocol, Simple Mail
Transfer Protocol and Format of Electronic Mail Messages. Dedicated connections
must also implement Management Information Base-II and Simple Network
Management Protocol.
(2)
Application standards. All new hosts must provide Internet access through a
graphical HTTP/1.0 or higher client. All existing hosts must provide Internet
access through a graphical user interface (GUI) HTTP/1.0 or higher client, if
this is possible with existing network hardware and software and the addition
of client software; if not, existing hosts must provide Internet access through
a text-based HTTP/1.0 or higher client.
(3) Bandwidth standards. All connections must
have guaranteed availability of bandwidth.
(A) Dedicated lines must have at least 56
Kbps available to the library at all times.
(B) Dialup connections must be equipped by
both the library and the provider to handle connections of at least 28.8 Kbps,
regardless of the expected performance of the telephone line. Internet
providers must guarantee service equivalent to a connection on 95% of
connection attempts during the period 9:00 a.m. to 9:00 p.m. (local time)
daily.
(4) Addressing
standards. Each Internet host must have an Internet address that is used only
by the public library and its users; that is, temporary Internet addresses
dynamically assigned by an Internet provider are not acceptable if they may
also be assigned to other users. All Internet addresses must be resolvable to a
fully qualified domain name through a Domain Name System.
(5) Access Standards. Internet hosts must be
available for the direct use of library users during all open hours of the
library location. There must be at least one host available to library users in
each library location. For dedicated connections there must be at least one
host available to users for every 50,000 library circulations or greater part
thereof per year. Up to one dial-up port for every 150,000 circulations may be
counted as an available host. Library connections must allow users to:
(A) Search and use information sources on the
Internet and the World Wide Web, including those available by telnet, gopher,
HTTP, WAIS, and FTP.
(B) Obtain
copies of information by electronic-mailing, downloading to a diskette, and
printing.
(6) All
permanent public service staff must be trained to use and support library users
in the use of Internet access; other permanent library staff must be trained to
use networked information and services as needed to support their job
tasks.
(7) All permanent public
service, technical service, and administrative staff must have access to
e-mail, telnet and World Wide Web.
(8) If the library operates a public access
automated catalog that can support a telnet, HTTP, or Z39.50 server, the
catalog must be made available to the general public on the Internet.
Disclaimer: These regulations may not be the most recent version. Texas may have more current or accurate information. We make no warranties or guarantees about the accuracy, completeness, or adequacy of the information contained on this site or the information linked to on the state site. Please check official sources.
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