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Options for A Central Archiving Service

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Concluded that archiving seems technically feasible using ... Ambrose Bierce, 1842-1914. JISC Licensing & Archiving Workshop 17/2/03. Our ideal future? ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Options for A Central Archiving Service


1
Options for A Central Archiving Service
  • Neil Beagrie
  • Maggie Jones
  • JISC

2
Whats Happening Now?
  • E-journal archiving developments
  • Related developments

3
Mellon-funded planning projects 2001-2002
  • Concluded that archiving seems technically
    feasible using different approaches
  • Increasingly shared understanding that e-version
    should be publication of record
  • Participating publishers viewed archiving as
    competitive advantage
  • New organisations will be necessary to act in the
    broad interests of the scholarly community and
    mediate the interest of libraries and publishers

4
Lots of Copies Keeps Stuff Safe (LOCKSS)
  • Creates low-cost caches of e-journals content
  • Supported by NSF, Mellon, Sun Microsytems
  • Working to build production software
  • Has several participating publishers, including
    Blackwells, OUP, Project Muse, ACS, APS, BMJ
  • Has several libraries participating world-wide
  • U.K participating libraries are BL, Cambridge,
    Leeds, Imperial College

5
JSTOR
  • very different model to LOCKSS
  • centralised model
  • established functional unit within JSTOR in
    October 02
  • currently drafting technical requirements and
    initial systems design
  • drafting potential business models
  • launching study into library e-journal processing
    costs
  • will also be looking at economics of e-journals
    from publishers perspective

6
LOCKSS/JSTOR
  • Mellon funding both in belief that single
    definitive approach is unlikely
  • Both have established credentials within library
    and publisher communities

7
OCLC Digital Archive
  • building on co-operative model
  • act as agent on behalf of membership with
    publishers
  • have invested 2.4m in staff and administration
    and 675K in h/ware/s/ware costs to date
  • economies of scale and deep infrastructure seen
    as key
  • OCLC has been actively involved in digital
    preservation issues - metadata, attributes of
    trusted digital repository

8
Elsevier/KB Collaboration
  • Elsevier providing all of its digital files to
    the KB (7.2 terabytes)
  • The KB will act as Elseviers official archive
  • Elsevier has signalled that it hopes to establish
    3 official archives worldwide
  • KB can provide access to onsite users or
    externally in the event of disaster and/or
    collapse of Elsevier

9
Whats Happening in the U.K- DTI Report
  • In order for the U.K to protect access to
    important research material and to ensure that
    small and not-for-profit publishers are not
    unfairly disadvantaged, the archiving of digital
    research should be organised at a national level
    by government. A content repository together
    with access rights should be created by
    government and industry for use by national
    academic and research institutions.
  • Publishing in the Knowledge Economy, 2002.
    Action Point 22
  • lthttp//www.uk-publishing.info/gt

10
Legal Deposit
  • BL is working with other deposit libraries and
    with publishers pending legal deposit legislation
  • Legal Deposit is critically important in
    preserving a nations cultural heritage
  • Continued access to licensed e-journals is a
    separate matter

11
RSLG Report, 2003
  • Recommends establishment of new body to lead and
    co-ordinate the provision of research information
    (RLN)
  • Recommend work on needs and costs in preservation
    of digital materials
  • Establish mechanisms for last resort archiving
    of material not reliably preserved elsewhere

12
NESLI/JISC Model Licence
  • Have included specific archiving clauses since
    1999
  • 2.2.2, 5.4.1 and 5.4.2 refer to the need to
    provide users with access to the full text of the
    Licensed Material which was published and paid
    for within the Subscription Period

13
Options in Model Licence
  • Continuing online access to the same material
    from the Publishers server or a third party
    server
  • Supplying an archival copy to the Licensee or a
    central archiving facility operated on behalf of
    the UK HE Community

14
Publisher Archive
  • Continued online access from publishers server
    implies publisher has sole responsibility for
    ensuring continued access to their content
  • Larger publishers are investing in infrastructure
    to maintain digital assets

15
Publisher Archive
  • Places responsibility with owners of content
  • BUT publishers will need to recoup this cost
  • will only retain material while it is
    commercially viable
  • variable capacity/willingness to deliver
  • subject to unpredictable market forces

16
Institutional Archive
  • Licensee retains material they have licensed
  • BUT this is mostly in CD-ROM format
  • CD-ROM is not an archival format, most libraries
    are making a strategic move away from CD-ROM
  • Randomly scattered copies likely to be both
    inefficient and ineffective

17
Central Archiving Facility
  • Implies standalone facility
  • Other options are
  • Collaborative model with partners within the U.K
  • Collaborative model outside the U.K
  • Defer any action to establish an archiving service

18
Issues Common to any Archiving Service
  • Needs to have active participation and
    co-operation of publishers
  • Needs to conform to appropriate standards and
    attributes of trusted digital repositories
  • Must be affordable/sustainable
  • Needs to be able to provide secure access from
    the archive in accordance with licence provisions
  • Needs to have solid legal basis

19
Steps Common to All Options
  • Detailed discussion with publishers (via PALS?
    Special working group?)
  • Refining requirements
  • technical, legal, organisational
  • Detailed costing
  • Establishing business case and model
  • Obtaining funding - possibly both capital (CSR
    2004?) and recurrent

20
Standalone Service Operated on Behalf of U.K HE/FE
  • Additional steps would include
  • Obtaining legal advice (licensing, entity)
  • Issuing ITT and testing market

21
Benefits of Standalone Option
  • Fulfils identified need
  • Can be tailored to specific requirements of UK
    HE/FE
  • Relatively simple to administer

22
Risks of Standalone Model
  • Large capital costs
  • Rapidly changing environment
  • Size of UK market may be too small to be
    cost-effective
  • Business development/archiving skills-base
    limited
  • Difficult to predict potential impact of other
    developments (e.g. open access models)

23
Collaborative Model - U.K
  • Additional steps would include
  • Identifying partners (larger publishers and
    deposit libraries would be likely candidates)
  • Identifying roles and responsibilities within the
    partnership

24
Benefits of Collaborative U.K Model
  • Fulfils identified need
  • Can be tailored to specific needs of U.K HE/FE
  • Possibly cheaper than standalone model?
  • Enables some economies of scale?

25
Risks of Collaborative U.K Model
  • Rapidly changing environment
  • Difficult to predict potential impact of other
    models
  • Likely to take longer to establish?
  • More complex to administer
  • Risk of one or more partner withdrawing over time

26
Collaborative Model 2 - outside U.K
  • Additional steps would include
  • Identifying partners (possibilities are
    LOCKSS/JSTOR/OCLC)

27
Benefits of Collaborative 2 Model
  • Fulfils identified need
  • Uses existing infrastructure
  • No development costs
  • Potential for economies of scale
  • Does not require large capital costs

28
Risks of Collaborative 2 Model
  • Rapidly changing environment
  • Difficult to predict potential impact of other
    developments
  • May be more difficult to meet specific needs of
    U.K HE/FE

29
Defer Archiving Service
  • Rationale
  • May be premature, given current uncertainties
  • Larger publishers are already investing in
    archives
  • Need time to assess impact of alternative models
    of scholarly communication

30
Defer Archiving Service
  • Steps would include
  • Communicating decision to all relevant
    stakeholders
  • Managing likely fallout within UK HE Community
  • Putting in place closer working relationship with
    publishers
  • Using Model Licence as main mechanism for
    consumer protection

31
Defer Archiving Service - Benefits
  • No special effort or funding required to maintain
    status quo
  • Gives some breathing space

32
Defer Archiving Service - Risks
  • Current position is unsustainable
  • Reinforces market distortions for small/medium
    publishers
  • Libraries have no confidence in security of
    content and cost
  • Publishers unable/unwilling to really guarantee
    continued access
  • Publishers wont necessarily use Model Licence

33
The future.
  • That period of time in which our affairs
    prosper, our friends are true and our happiness
    is assured.
  • Ambrose Bierce, 1842-1914.

34
Our ideal future?
  • Libraries able to move to e-only confident that
    they will have access for as long as they need
    and at a price they can afford
  • Publishers able to focus on adding value to
    content
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