Title:
1- Preserving Digital Archives
- Step-by-step solutions
- Najla Semple
- Digital Preservation Coalition
2Overview
- Digital Preservation Coalition activities
- UK Needs Assessment
- Collaboration examples
- Solutions
- Where to go next
3Fuzzy end of the lollipop...
4Digital Preservation Coalition
- Promoting Digital Preservation
- Efforts aimed at ensuring digital preservation is
on the agenda of key stakeholders. This involves
an advocacy and PR campaign, press articles,
conference papers, the UK Needs Assessment, etc. - Acting to increase funding
- Ensuring the nations investment in preservation
- Fostering collaboration and forging strategic
alliances - With relevant agencies nationally and
internationally - e.g. National Library of Australia, Library of
Congress.
5Six Work Packages
- 4. Producing, providing, and disseminating
information - Building expertise in digital preservation e.g.
commissioning Technology Watch Reports and
holding DPC forums. Developing the DPC website
and producing quarterly reports of Whats New in
Digital Preservation, monthly reports to members
via Discussion lists - 5. Promoting and developing services,
technology, standards - and training
- E.g. Initiating training workshops, so far held
in Edinburgh, London and Belfast, and producing
Technology Watch Reports, developing intensive
digital preservation training programme - Continuing to develop the Coalitions activities
- Recruiting membership and attracting resources to
support DPCs goals
6Digital Preservation CoalitionInternal Structure
DPC Work plan
Consultancies
- Website
- Public Relations
- Tech ?
- Surveys
DPC Office
7Members of the DPC
Archives Museums Records
Libraries
Cross-Sectoral Membership
Publishing Media
Data services
Government Research Policy
8Activities Regular events
- Whats New in Digital Preservation?
- A quarterly report prepared by the National
Library of Australias PADI and the DPC (UKOLN
compiles this for the DPC) - PADI, set up in 1996, is a comprehensive subject
gateway to international digital preservation
resources - The reports list a summary of international
- preservation activities
- Information compiled from the
- PADI gateway and mailing lists
9Activities UK Initiatives
- Preservation management of Digital Material
Handbook - Developed by Neil Beagrie and Maggie Jones in
2000. -
- Online version to be developed further
- Available free at www.dpconline.org
- Used as a basis for workshops and tutorials, and
may be used for more intensive training
programmes - Offers a practical step-by-step guide for
- those involved in all stages of digital
- preservation
10Activities Initiatives
- Technology Watch Reports
- These are user-friendly reports the DPC has
commissioned experts to write. Authors avoid
complicated jargon-filled language so that
reports are accessible to all - Reports focus on emerging preservation standards,
technical formats, and developments in tools
which are critical in assisting digital
preservation activities - Reports available on the DPC website
- Introduction to OAIS Brian Lavoie/OCLC
- Institutional Repositories Paul Wheatley
- Large-Scale Archival Storage Jim Linden, Sean
Martin, Richard Masters and Roderic Parker
(British Library) - Preservation Metadata Brian Lavoie OCLC
11How big is the problem?
- Challenge of quantifying the problem
- Challenge of articulating the danger
- Between hysteria (Digital Dark Ages) and
- Complacency (the problem is exaggerated)
- We need some more detail
- More facts and figures on which to base
sustainable forward plans - Information which will engage funders and
decision makers
12Activities Initiatives
UK Needs Assessment Exercise
MLA Funded Regional Survey (2005)
DPC Members Survey (2003)
- Map of DPC Members
- Scenarios of Data Loss
- Surveys
- Interviews
- Other Data
13UK Needs Assessment
- Building up a picture of what is (and isnt)
happening in the UK - Gathering data on volumes and formats
- Identifying priorities
- Quantifying the problem
- Building sufficient knowledge base to be able to
plan effectively
14Influence over formats
Limited influence over formats 6
Able to influence formats 25
Not aware of any influence over formats 22
No data acquired from outside organisation 16
No influence over formats 31
15Some Recent Developments Trends
- Emphasis on learning by doing
- More practical projects and ongoing research to
inform longer-term programmes - Development of services and tools
- Emphasis on good practice in creating digital
resources. - Greater collaboration
- With wider range of partners
16UK Web Archiving Consortium
17Digital Curation Centre
www.dcc.ac.uk
18Digital Preservation Training Programme
www.ulcc.ac.uk/dptp
19Open-source
Open source initiative
Open source watch
Free software foundation
20Audit Certification
- Collaboration on Certification for repositories
DCC - E.g. certifiable emulation strategies
- Out-sourcing agencies DPC information leaflet
21Life-cycle responsibilities
Preservation specialists
Information Specialists
All Organisations
22Lessons learned to date
- We cant rely on chance survival.
- Recovery of data will always be more costly than
lifecycle management. - It is much more cost-effective to manage data
from creation. - No single organisation will be able to manage the
vast amounts of digital resources need very
high degree of cooperation and collaboration. - There wont be a single definitive solution.
23UNESCO Guidelines
- 5.2.3 Responsibility
- Everyone does not have to do everything
everything does not have to be done all at once. - it is usually better for non-comprehensive and
non-reliable action to be taken than for no
action at all. Small steps are usually better
than no steps. - 5.2.10 Management
- 33. Waiting for comprehensive, reliable solutions
to appear before taking responsible action will
probably mean material is lost.
24Strategies
- Raise awareness for courses to contain digital
preservation element - There is knowledge in county councils
- Harnessing it
- Creating partnerships
- Shared tools and expertise
25Cornells 5 Organizational Stages
- Acknowledge understanding that digital
preservation is a local concern - Act initiating digital preservation projects
- Consolidate moving from projects to programs
- Institutionalize incorporating the larger
environment and rationalizing programs - Externalize embracing inter-institutional
collaboration and dependency
26Where do we go from here?
- Determine whether your institution has a need and
sufficient interest to develop a digital
preservation program. - Determine if digital preservation could be added
to or derived from your institutional mission
statement or some other mandate. - Seek support from senior management to make
digital preservation commitment explicit and
ongoing. - Have senior management formally review and adopt
a formal policy.
27Where do you go from here?
- Promulgate and publicize policy.
- Maintain and update policy as living document.
- Develop 3-year preservation plan.
- Establish a digital preservation task force which
includes key stakeholders within the institution.
28Resources
- DPC, DCC
- PADI
- Training programme
- DPC Contracting out leaflet
- DPC List of preservation services
- TNA - PRONOM
29Funding
- DTI
- Commercial sector ?
- Consortia approach
- Useful case-studies
- Network of contacts
30Solutions
- There are no clear-cut or definitive solutions
- Progress depends on a mix of individual
institutional responsibility combined with
improved coordination at national, regional, and
local level as well as internationally - Good practice is evolving and support mechanisms
(e.g. DCC) are being developed - Good planning and documentation offer the best
prospects in the interim
31- Does it make sense to spend too much for
perfection? - - Clifford Lynch
32-
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- Thank You!
- www.dpconline.org