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digital preservation Institute on 21 st Century Librarianship Aug 10, 2000
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digital preservation digital reformatting Using digital technology to preserve the information content (explicit signal) of print and non-print materials. The product is a digital surrogate for the original. preserving digital objects born digital business records, archives electronic publications digital ephemera
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traditional reformatting microfilming photocopying photography other facsimile technologies
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digitization compared with traditional reformatting access material can be used in new ways value added can capture complex objects
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digital reformatting page images masters presentation versions reference versions simple readable text markup combination of above
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Once digitized, it’s just another object
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what makes digital preservation different? no benign neglect loss will happen without an action requires perpetual maintenance
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falsification & authentication before.jpg 937a0f56f2078859c4c2f81a96d48942 after.jpg d278b0a9741e164dd01467a4f6c36273
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maintenance backup housekeeping retensioning tapes refreshing monitoring & verification
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trivially: reduce need to handle originals may actually increase demand for originals (A Good Thing™) electronic browsing reduces casual handling use of electronic masters for publishing can digitization be preservation ?
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the prevailing wisdom says no media undependable institutional commitment to life- cycle management not in place standards lacking when compared to film, digital objects seem inherently ephemeral
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can digitization be preservation ? Challenges ongoing maintenance/lifecycle management standards no “roadmap” to follow best practices active involvement of technical staff and facilities
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can digitization be preservation ? Understandable counter- reaction to the attitude that “We digitized it; it’s preserved ”
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digitization must be preservation We have no choice We have a fallback Hide your valuables where the money is
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digital preservation policy tied to mission of institution makes explicit what aspects of a collection are being preserved and why indicates scope of institution’s commitment declares institution’s preservation strategies declares which standards/guidelines are being followed
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digital archiving born electronic reborn electronic preserving what we produce
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storage physical electronic Masters (offline, nearline) Access (nearline, online)
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strategic challenges ever increasing demand for services continuous technological change evolving standards and best practices
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strategic challenges making digitization a trusted preservation tool fostering long- term outlook digital archiving
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sorry we ran overtime http://www.clir.org/ http://www.nla.gov.au/padi/ http://www.dlib.org/ http://www.rlg.org/preserv/diginews/ http://palimpsest.stanford.edu/bytopic/electronic-records/ http://palimpsest.stanford.edu/bytopic/electronic- records/electronic-storage-media/ http://aic.stanford.edu/conspec/emg/
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digital reformatting
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lossless copying Potentially lossless multi- generational copying Except Depends on proper copying and verification May be complicated by compression Device evolution may make bit-for-bit copying impossible (i.e. may involve some format changes
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digitization Detail: “presentation version” Detail: “reference version”
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