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Preservation of the digital memory

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Title: Preservation of the digital memory


1
Preservation of the digital memory
  • Ray Edmondson
  • Archive Associates Pty Ltd, Australia

2
Defining preservation
  • Preservation is the sum total of the steps
    necessary to ensure the permanent accessibility
    forever -- of documentary heritage
  • (UNESCO Memory of the World General Guidelines to
    Safeguard Documentary Heritage 2002)
  • It is an ongoing process
  • Nothing has ever been preserved it is being
    preserved
  • The objective of preservation is permanent access

3
UNESCO Charter on the Preservation of the
Digital Heritage (2003)
  • Digital materials include
  • texts, databases, still and moving images,
    audio, graphics, software and web pages
  • Analog material converted to digital, usually for
    access
  • Born digital documents
  • http//portal.unesco.org/ci/en/ev.php-URL_ID13366
    URL_DODO_TOPICURL_SECTION201.html

4
Access
  • Should be free of unreasonable restrictions
  • Sensitive and personal information should be
    protected from intrusion
  • Fair balance between legitimate rights of
    creators and rights holders
  • and the rights of the public to access public
    memory

5
Threat of loss
  • Obsolescence of hardware and software
  • Uncertain resources
  • Locating responsibility for acquisition,
    preservation and maintenance
  • Lack of supportive legislation
  • Rapid evolution attitudinal change lags
    technological change
  • Cost of new preservation strategies

6
Continuity
  • Preservation depends on continuous action, from
    creation onwards
  • Design of reliable systems and procedures
  • Maintaining stable and authentic digital objects
  • Needs sustained, direct action not passive
    benign neglect
  • Losses usually not recoverable

7
Selection
  • Criteria vary by country and locality
  • Significance, and lasting cultural, scientific,
    evidential or other value
  • For preservation, give priority to born
    digital, not transfers from analog
  • Should be accountable, based on defined
    principles, policies, procedures, standards

8
Protecting digital heritage
  • Legal and institutional frameworks
  • Archive and deposit legislation for libraries,
    archives, museums should embrace digital heritage
  • Access to deposits should be assured (without
    prejudice to normal exploitation)
  • Legal/ technical frameworks to protect
    authenticity against manipulation and intentional
    alteration

9
Roles and responsibilities
  • Urge cooperation between hardware/ software
    developers, creators, publishers, producers
  • and national libraries, archives and museums
  • Develop training and research
  • Share experience and knowledge

10
The digital divide
  • Dependence on expensive technology and software
    separates haves and have nots
  • The internet democratises access
  • except for those without the technology
  • Written documents require literate users
  • Audiovisual documents dont require literacy

11
Determining policies and criteria
  • The Charter and the UNESCO Guidelines for the
    preservation of digital heritage (which provides
    practical application of the Charter) including
    in limited-resource situations gives advice on
    how to
  • Decide parameters
  • Decide responsibilities
  • Decide what to keep
  • Decide access arrangements

12
Deciding parameters - 1
  • These are fundamental policy and strategic issues
  • What material are you responsible for?
  • Who can you cooperate with?
  • What expertise is available?
  • Who are relevant publishers/ distributors how
    will they cooperate?
  • Who are potential users?

13
Deciding parameters - 2
  • What level of functionality?
  • Interactive?
  • User- modifiable?
  • Read only
  • Do you start small and evolve or conceptualise
    the whole?
  • What is under threat?
  • What is most urgent?
  • Paper a radical alternative?

14
Deciding responsibilities - 1
  • What organisations/ agencies are responsible?
    Archives, libraries, museums, others? Is the
    responsibility specific and formalised?
  • Where will the data be stored and managed?
  • Will it be regularly refreshed, backed up,
    transferred as hardware/ software changes?
  • Is it secure against tampering?
  • Is there a disaster recovery strategy?

15
Deciding responsibilities - 2
  • Who will handle the ingest (receiving,
    preparing and transferring digital material)?
  • Ingest should include
  • Applying selection criteria
  • Quality checking
  • Adding a unique identifier within the system
  • Deciding file formats
  • How will documents be kept accessible as
    hardware/ software changes?

16
Selection principles - 1
  • Selection always happens
  • By deliberate policy
  • By default
  • By coincidence
  • By neglect
  • By deterioration
  • By technical change
  • Take control. Make a considered choice.

17
Selection principles - 2
  • Selection is imperfect. We cant see with the
    eyes of the future, but need to make a best guess
  • We need to maximise future options, not close
    them off
  • We shape the future with our choices
  • Well be wrong sometimes

18
Selection policy
  • A written policy is essential promulgated and
    observed. Provides accountability and guidance
    for others
  • Set out vision, mandate, goals
  • Invoke external reference points UNESCO, ICA,
    IFLA, CCAAA
  • State ethics, standards, relationships
  • Prioritise born digital for preservation and
    access, born analog for access only (unless in
    danger).

19
Memory of the World perspective
  • Check selection criteria for registers in the
    General Guidelines
  • Documents comprise content plus carrier
  • Born digital are independent of carrier
  • Analog documents have both content and carrier
    the relationship is important
  • Digitised analog documents are a representation
    of the original

20
Selection criteria
  • Intellectual criteria intrinsic significance
    (historical record, national identity,
    personalities, places, artistic merit)
  • Evidentiary value (transactions, deeds,
    ownership, legal records)
  • Informational and cultural value
  • Decide scope published/ unpublished, geographic,
    subjects
  • Choose more rather than less. You can de-select
    excess documents later no second chance for what
    is passed over now.

21
Metadata
  • Crucial to preservation, control, access
  • Thoroughly document technical character of data
    to maintain future migration possibilities
  • Absolute consistency in file naming conventions
    prefer serial names
  • Conventional cataloguing by trained cataloguers
    structured and rigorous, subject and name
    authorities

22
Access
  • On line, off line, CD, DVD.
  • Internal and external
  • Managing rights back to metadata
  • Digitising reduces physical wear and tear
  • Content analysis tools provide new ways into
    content
  • but the human element remains. Searchability
    often needs an archivist!

23
CD and DVD
  • Mass produced and writable versions
  • Discs and hardware cheap and available
  • CD, DVD, HD DVD, Blu-ray
  • Moving image content often compressed
  • Quality of the disc, the burn, the player
    lack of standards
  • Physically vulnerable scratchable sandwich
  • Limited technology life
  • Unreliable for preservation OK for access

24
Moment of truth
  • All digital carriers are unreliable to some
    extent! So.
  • Choose data tape or hard disc systems for
    preservation the testing, copying and management
    systems help to maintain data integrity
  • The digital memory must be in constant motion
    from system to system to avoid loss
  • Aim for a sustainable system (not permanent
    carriers)

25
Thoughts for the day - 1
  • Digitising on demand often necessary but cuts
    across other priorities
  • Files corrupt. Constant refreshment is essential
  • Software change makes older documents unreadable
    without emulation software
  • Quality control is vital. Analog to digital
    transfer involves information loss sometimes
    considerable
  • Use open source repository software where
    possible less cost, more control

26
Thoughts for the day - 2
  • There is no permanent, ultimate storage medium.
  • Rapid obsolesence is characteristic of software
    and hardware. The format of most digital
    documents gets quickly out of date.
  • Some analog carriers paper, film, disc sound
    recordings are low-tech and relatively stable.
    Digitise for access only. No point in digitising
    for preservation!

27
Beware the myths
  • Digital is cheaper
  • Digital is permanent
  • Digital is authentic
  • Digital is standardised
  • Digital is safe
  • Digital is simpler
  • Digital is better
  • Everything will ultimately be digital
  • ..NONE of these is true, however appealing!!

28
Recognise the facts
  • Digital permanently changes how we work
  • Born digital must usually be preserved as such
  • Some analog preservation paths are disappearing,
    but
  • Our future will be BOTH digital and analog not
    either/or
  • Analog loss is gradual and predictable.
  • ..digital loss is sudden and TOTAL.
  • Migration is a TWO WAY STREET. Going from digital
    TO analog is sometimes preferable!

29
Digital Heritage reference points
  • UNESCO Charter in digital heritage
  • http//portal.unesco.org/ci/en/ev.php-URL_ID133
    66URL_DODO_TOPICURL_SECTION201.html
  • Draft Brazilian Charter
  • http//portal.unesco.org/ci/en/ev.php-URL_ID
    15870URL_DODO_TOPICURL_SECTION201.html
  • UNESCO resource on E- heritage
  • http//portal.unesco.org/ci/en/ev.php-URL_ID1539
    URL_DODO_TOPICURL_SECTION201.html
  • Guidelines for the preservation of digital
    heritage
  • http//portal.unesco.org/ci/en/ev.php-URL_ID1327
    1URL_DODO_TOPICURL_SECTION201.html

30
Memory of the World resources
  • www.unesco.org/webworld/mdm and look for the
    papers of the Technical Subcommittee, including
  • Risks associated with the use of recordable CDs
    and DVDs..
  • Open source archival repositories

31
What do you think?
  • Do CDs sound better than vinyl?
  • Will e-books replace the paper book?
  • Will e-news replace newspapers?
  • Will family photos survive longer in digital or
    analog form?
  • Will you be able to buy a CD or DVD player 10
    years from now?
  • What is the average life of a website?

32
SO.
  • Never deliberately lose information or reduce
    your preservation and access options retain
    analog originals for their life
  • Use BOTH digital and analog for their different
    strengths public access, restoration,
    preservation
  • Make considered preservation and access choices
    case by case
  • .AND ALWAYS BACK UP!!

33
Closing thoughts
  • The struggle of man against power is the struggle
    of memory against forgetting.
  • Milan Kundera, Czechoslovakian novelist (1929 - )
  • To be ignorant of what happened before you were
    born is to be ever a child. For what is man's
    lifetime unless the memory of past events is
    woven with those of earlier times?
  • Cicero, Orator, Roman author, orator,
    politician (106 BC - 43 BC)

34
Muchas gracias!
  • www.archival.com.au
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