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The cost of continuity

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Over 93% of new information is created in digital form, or ... companies, ... critical to the perpetuation of research and development (Hodge & Carroll 2001) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The cost of continuity


1
The cost of continuity
  • Alan Howell
  • State Library of Victoria

2
Overview
  • Background
  • Six key issues
  • Shortage of relevant data
  • Costs higher than for traditional resources
  • Costs occur throughout the life-cycle
  • Short-termism
  • Long-term value is difficult to determine
  • Uncertainties about who pays
  • Summary of findings

3
Background
  • Context
  • Modes of digital death
  • Definition
  • Digital preservation cost paradox

4
1.1 Context
  • Over 93 of new information is created in digital
    form, or born digital (Lyman, 2000)
  • Digital resources are
  • inherently fragile, easily corrupted or altered
  • require access technologies that are changing at
    an ever increasing pace
  • worth preserving (as much as traditional
    resources)
  • Time-frame for preservation is reducing

5
1.2 Modes of digital death
  • Hanna (2001) and Wiggins (2001) propose how to
    lose resources. They advise
  • Reorganise the content (404 death)
  • Encourage the sponsor to fear history
  • Stick with outdated media, hardware, systems
  • Lose your software (and the manuals)
  • Lose critical metadata (indexes, dependencies)
  • Fail to protect authenticity
  • Ignore the cost of preservation

6
1.3 Definition / scope
  • Costs of digital preservation costs
  • Costs includes all costs over full life-cycle
    of resources
  • For a large or popular collection, electricity
    begins to become a factor

7
1.4 Digital preservation cost paradox
  • The overarching paradox of digital preservation
    is that people think of digital content as
    inexpensive and inexpensive things are not
    worth preserving
  • (Brand, 1999)

8
2. Six key issues
  • Shortage of relevant data
  • Costs higher than for traditional resources
  • Costs occur throughout life-cycle
  • Pervasive short-termism
  • Long-term value difficult to determine
  • Uncertainties over who pays

9
2.1 Shortage of relevant data
  • Difficult aspect on which to gather information,
    due to
  • in many cases, respondents indicated that they
    just didnt know how much the archive was costing
    or would cost in the future (Hodge Carroll,
    2001 Russell Weinberger, 2000)
  • Difficulty in extrapolating costs from pilot
    projects (of which there are many) to full-scale
    public services
  • Cost of preservation enmeshed in cost of access

10
  • Until several large archives have gone through
    at least one or two migrations or emulation
    developments, it will not be possible to separate
    the cost for the archives from the cost of doing
    business
  • (Hodge Carroll, 2001)

11
(Feeney, Kelly Weinberger costing models)
12
2.2 Costs higher than for traditional information
resources
  • Digital preservation will be more expensive and
    more intensive (library community)
  • High cost in minimising data loss inherent in
    digital resources
  • Strategies aiming for a loss rate no greater than
    1 in 100 million are being implemented (PRO 1999)
  • No equivalent in paper-based preservation!

13
  • If Captain
  • Cooks Journal lost
  • 1 part in 100
  • million it would
  • lose less than
  • 1/1000th of a
  • micron from
  • each page!

14
2.3 Costs will occur throughout the life-cycle of
digital resources
  • Preservation always an ongoing cost
  • For traditional resoucess, active preservation
    only takes place when deterioration sets in
  • Digital preservation represents a continuum.
    Re-creation (cost) is inherent
  • Creation and preservation gap is shrinking
  • Creation of a digital object is the true
    starting point for preservation (Kelly
    Weinberger, 2000)

15
2.4 Short-termism
  • Exponential growth has emphasised the speed and
    ease of short-term access
  • Little regard for the long-term preservation.
    no firm plans for migration, but will plan to
    stay up to date with current technologies by
    migrating the content to each new technology
    (Hodge Carroll, 2001)
  • Mandates exist at legal repository level but
    without sufficient funding

16
  • The big marketplace problem with preservation is
    that the natural beneficiaries do not seek
    service until many years after the stuff has to
    be saved
  • (Gladney, 2001)

17
2.5 Long-term value of digital resources is
difficult to determine
  • Selection for preservation is best based on
    significance
  • Works for traditional resources (time)
  • Cant wait for digital resources to demonstrate
    their worth over time
  • Increases the importance of selection guidelines
    (PANDORA)

18
2.6 Uncertainties about who pays
  • Creator
  • Publisher
  • Libraries of publishing organisations
  • Data centres
  • Third party repositories
  • Legal depositories
  • Users

19
Who pays? Creator
  • Not very involved in the digital archiving
    process (but changing as metadata gains
    importance) (Hodge Carroll 2001)

20
Who pays? Publisher
  • Minimum back-up
  • As long as theres a business need
  • For publishers and produces, the cost of
    archiving is still tied up in the cost of
    manufacturer (Hodge Carroll 2001)

21
Who pays? Libraries / archives of publishing
organisations
  • Publishers, data producers, societies, cultural
    organisations, government agencies, academic
    institutions, universities, industries
  • In organisations such as pharmaceutical,
    chemical and petroleum companies, critical to
    the perpetuation of research and development
    (Hodge Carroll 2001)
  • Part of mission, ethos, urgent need to create
    and preserve their own archival histories
    (Lyman)

22
Who pays? Data centres
  • National Digital Archive for Datasets (UK), NASA
    Distributed Active Archive Centres (USA)
  • Large volumes of relatively simple data
  • Most mature archival model
  • Simplest organisational model (clear IP rights
    owner funder)
  • Model allows access by funding agency

23
Who pays? Third party repositories
  • Publication Service Providers
  • Ingenta, HighWire Press (journal publishing
    industry)
  • Primary role vendors secondary archiving
  • Economic model not clear (bundled services)
  • Repository Management Agents
  • JSTOR, OCLC Electronic Journals Project, LOCKSS,
    Internet Archive
  • Trusted third-party repositories
  • Safety net

24
Who pays? Legal depositories
  • National depositories (archives)
  • Document the business of government
  • Government initiatives in UK, USA and Aus.
  • National, state and university libraries with
    legal deposit status
  • Will preserve digital resources while mandate to
    maintain the cultural, history and intellectual
    output of the country or state remains
  • Instrumental in raising issue
  • National Libraries active

25
Who pays? User
  • Not very involved in the archiving process
  • Endowment model would set aside a portion of the
    payment for the use (whether storage or access)
    of the archive for its perpetual care (Hodge
    Carroll, 2001)

26
3. Summary of findings
  • Projects dont scale to services
  • Preservation costs enmeshed in access costs
  • Costs of preserving complex objects unknown
  • Costs start with creation
  • Costs are ongoing (throughout life-cycle)
  • No equivalent to benign neglect
  • Who pays? variety of economic models likely
  • Build something in !

27
  • The preservation of digital information cannot
    wait for exact information because it may never
    appear
  • (Dale Bellinger, 2001)

28
References
  • Barry, T. (2001). 'Re DLs in UK (renewed
    objection)'. Email to DIGLIB discussion list
    22/10/01. cited 22 October 2001.
  • Beagrie, N. and M. Jones (2000). 'Preservation
    management of digital materials workbook
    (pre-publication draft)'. Online. Available
    from Internet URL http//www.jisc.ac.uk/dner/pre
    servation/workbook/. cited 17 November 2001.
  • Brand, S. (1999). "Escaping the digital dark
    age." Library Journal 124(2) 46-48.
  • Feeney, M., Ed. (1999). 'The digital culture
    maximising the nation's investment a synthesis
    of JISC/NPO studies on the preservation of
    electronic materials'. London, British Library
    Board, National Preservation Office.

29
  • Garrett, J. and D. Walters (1996). 'Preserving
    digital information report of the Task Force on
    Archiving of Digital Information'. Online.
    Available from Internet URL http//www.rlg.org/A
    rchTF/. cited 16 November 2001.
  • Gladney, H. (2001). 'Writings on preservation'.
    Email to DIGLIB discussion list 22/10/01.
    cited 22 October 2001.
  • Hanna, M. (2001). 'Born digital - live digital?
    Maybe'. Online. Available from Internet URL
    http//www.icsti/forum/38/. cited 4 November
    2001.
  • Hodge, G. and B. C. Carroll (2001). 'Digital
    electronic archiving the state of the art and
    the state of the practice'. Online. Available
    from Internet URL http//www.icsti.org/icsti/wha
    ts_new.html. cited 10 November 2001.
  • Kahle, B. (2001?). Quoted in Wiggins, Richard
    2001. cited 18 November 2001.

30
  • National Library of Australia (2001). 'Preserving
    Access to Digital Information (PADI)'. Online.
    Available from Internet URL http//www.nla.gov.a
    u/padi/. cited 18 November 2001.
  • Russell, K. and E. Weinberger (2000). 'Cost
    elements of digital preservation'. Online.
    Available from Internet URL http//www.leeds.ac.
    uk/cedars/documents/CIW01r.html. cited 15
    November 2001.
  • Wiggins, R. (2001). 'Digital preservation
    paradox and promise'. Online. Available from
    Internet URL http//www.libraryjournal.com/digit
    al_preservation.asp. cited 18 November 2001.

31
Overview
  • Background
  • Six key issues
  • Shortage of relevant data
  • Costs higher than for traditional resources
  • Costs occur throughout the life-cycle
  • Short-termism
  • Long-term value is difficult to determine
  • Uncertainties about who pays
  • Summary of findings

32
The cost of continuity
  • Alan Howell
  • State Library of Victoria
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