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European Commission on Preservation and Access www.knaw.nl/ecpa Preservation of digital heritage Yola de Lusenet Lisbon, November 26 2002.

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Presentation on theme: "European Commission on Preservation and Access www.knaw.nl/ecpa Preservation of digital heritage Yola de Lusenet Lisbon, November 26 2002."— Presentation transcript:

1 European Commission on Preservation and Access www.knaw.nl/ecpa Preservation of digital heritage Yola de Lusenet Lisbon, November 26 2002

2 European Commission on Preservation and Access www.knaw.nl/ecpa So much information....  1-2 billion Gigabytes per year  wide variety of materials  new media, new roles, new responsibilities  what needs to be preserved and by whom?

3 European Commission on Preservation and Access www.knaw.nl/ecpa The good old days...  legal frameworks support preservation  deposit of print materials  legislation for appraisal and preservation of records  specialized archives for specific materials (film, sound, broadcasting)

4 European Commission on Preservation and Access www.knaw.nl/ecpa A bright new world?  media have become mixed  content and functionality to deal with  information evolves: versions, updates  no fixed categories  databases and dynamic websites  information distributed over different localities

5 European Commission on Preservation and Access www.knaw.nl/ecpa Publishing on the web?  no filtering mechanism of publishers and official organizations  lots of ‘official publications’ also on the web but..  also lots of garbage and...  lots of valuable stuff by individuals or informal interest groups  cultural activity creates potential heritage

6 European Commission on Preservation and Access www.knaw.nl/ecpa “Preservation of digital heritage”?  dealing with the heritage of the future  preservation starts early in life cycle  generation of soft- and hardware only a few years  time frame for preservation has shrunk: in the digital world, five years is ‘long term’

7 European Commission on Preservation and Access www.knaw.nl/ecpa Facts about digital  need to keep up with technological change  information is changed all the time  the short life of a website: average from 44 days to 2 years

8 European Commission on Preservation and Access www.knaw.nl/ecpa Records on the web?  no fixed object to preserve  what is a record anyway?  records will change when moved to new environments  which are the significant properties of an authentic record?  which web materials are records-in-disguise?

9 European Commission on Preservation and Access www.knaw.nl/ecpa What is being done?  extend legal deposit to electronic materials  voluntary deposit for on-line publications  preserving selected websites as ‘publications’  preserving selected websites as ‘records’

10 European Commission on Preservation and Access www.knaw.nl/ecpa Harvesting the web  comprehensive approach  no selection for content  the whole web: the Internet Archive http://www.archive.org/index.html  selection by ‘nationality’: Sweden, Finland

11 European Commission on Preservation and Access www.knaw.nl/ecpa Saving or preserving websites?  links are broken  dynamic materials: the ‘Deep Web’  interactive features  we save a snapshot of the web but: saving is not preservation

12 European Commission on Preservation and Access www.knaw.nl/ecpa What should be preserved?  media  bit stream  information  functionality  look-and-feel over time, something is bound to be lost

13 European Commission on Preservation and Access www.knaw.nl/ecpa Essentials  Integrity: the material is complete and undamaged  Authenticity: the material is what we believe it to be  Protection against intentional change against accidental change

14 European Commission on Preservation and Access www.knaw.nl/ecpa The way of the world  digital materials are not fixed  environments in which they function change Choice between  moving forward to new environments? new functionality, new user expectations  freeze material as is? historical context, look-and-feel of ‘original’

15 European Commission on Preservation and Access www.knaw.nl/ecpa Describing is knowing  adequate representation depends on good documentation: of file formats of software and hardware of context, ‘provenance’ of changes, conversions authenticity checks also known as ‘metadata’

16 European Commission on Preservation and Access www.knaw.nl/ecpa Metadata  Administrative e.g. rights and legal access  Descriptive e.g. cataloguing and finding aids  Preservation e.g. data refreshing and migration  Technical e.g. hardware and software documentation, formats, compression ratios  Use: e.g. content re-use, multiversioning From Anne J. Gilliland-Swetland in: Introduction to metadata http://www.getty.edu/research/institute/standards/intrometadata/index.html

17 European Commission on Preservation and Access www.knaw.nl/ecpa Shift in preservation  only preserving the object is pointless  metadata help to maintain access  documentation is preservation activity  preservation is providing conditions for future representation preservation of access

18 European Commission on Preservation and Access www.knaw.nl/ecpa Technology follows  ‘any technological choice we make has inescapable implications for what will (and will not) be preserved. In the digital case, we must choose what to lose’, Rothenberg and Bikson  Jeff Rothenberg and Tora Bikson Carrying Authentic, Understandable and Usable Digital Records Through Time. Report to the Dutch National Archives and Ministry of the Interior, 1999, p.6.

19 European Commission on Preservation and Access www.knaw.nl/ecpa Technological basics  media deteriorate or get outdated: transfer to new media is essential  software becomes obsolete: migration to new platforms is inevitable  proprietary software is a ‘black box’ standards are helpful

20 European Commission on Preservation and Access www.knaw.nl/ecpa Tasks of heritage sector  Select what needs to be preserved  Define user requirements for long term  Create frameworks for division of responsibilities  Provide guidance for creators of information

21 European Commission on Preservation and Access www.knaw.nl/ecpa Copyright -the c-word  all copying strictly speaking illegal  exemption in law for copying for preservation  agreements between libraries and publishers  but what about rights to supporting software?  what about complex multimedia applications? general exemptions are needed

22 European Commission on Preservation and Access www.knaw.nl/ecpa We cannot wait and see..  a pro-active approach  trusted distributed repositories  divide tasks between libraries, data archives, research institutes, archives, institutions serving specific communities etc

23 European Commission on Preservation and Access www.knaw.nl/ecpa International initiatives  EU resolution under Spanish Presidency  UNESCO resolution October 2001 now in preparation:  charter on preservation of digital heritage  technical guidelines by National Library of Australia

24 Digital preservation: a balancing act

25 European Commission on Preservation and Access www.knaw.nl/ecpa For more information  PADI www.nla.gov.au/padi/www.nla.gov.au/padi/  GRIP www.knaw.nl/ecpa/gripwww.knaw.nl/ecpa/grip  DPC www.dpconline.orgwww.dpconline.org  CLIR www.clir.orgwww.clir.org


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