February 2012
Monthly Archive
Monthly Archive
Organisations can be a bit like the Queen with a selection of birth dates to choose from but the DPC is perhaps 10 years old today.
It was incorporated earlier but formally launched as an organisation at a reception in the House of Commons on 27th February 2002. Speakers at the event were Rosie Winterton MP Parliamentary Secretary in the Lord Chancellor’s Department, author and broadcaster Loyd Grossman, and Lynne Brindley then chair of the DPC.
At the time of the launch the DPC had 9 full members and 8 associate members: there are over 40 members and allied organisations today.
I came across the launch reception invitation recently so here is a scan.
Happy birthday!
We are delighted to announce that the Preserving Email technology watch report has now been published by the DPC. It is published electronically as a PDF and is now free to download from the DPC website at: http://dx.doi.org/10.7207/twr11-01. It was previously available as a preview to DPC members only from December 2011. Charles Beagrie are managing editors for the Technology Watch Series and have worked closely with the DPC in the production of this report. The full press release for the report is copied below and you are welcome to forward it to interested colleagues.
For immediate release
Preserving Email, a new report from the DPC gives practical advice on how to ensure email remains accessible
Email is a defining feature of our age and a critical element in all manner of transactions. Industry and commerce depend upon email; families and friendships are sustained by it; government and economies rely upon it; communities are created and strengthened by it. Voluminous, pervasive and proliferating, email fills our days like no other technology. Complex, intangible and essential, email manifests important personal and professional exchanges. The jewels are sometimes hidden in massive volumes of ephemera, and even greater volumes of trash. But it is hard to remember how we functioned before the widespread adoption of email in public and private life.
Institutions, organizations and individuals have a considerable investment in – and legal requirements to safeguard – large collections of email. IT managers and archivists have long recognised that email requires careful management if it is to be available in the long term but practical advice about how to do this is surprisingly sparse. So a new ‘Technology Watch Report’ from the Digital Preservation Coalition (DPC) will be of wide interest.
‘The first email was probably sent by researcher at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1965’, explained Chris Prom of the University of Illinois, the report’s author. ‘It has long since gone missing, deemed too trivial to be worth preserving.’
‘Since then email has become a valuable documentary form because people typically use it to write things that were not intended for wide revelation at the time. So it can contain material which researchers – and high court judges – find incredibly useful.’
‘Users normally shoulder the ultimate responsibility for managing and preserving their own email. This exposes important records to needless risks and is counterproductive in many cases. But it doesn’t have to be like this. Individuals and organizations can lay the foundation for long term access so long as they understand the technical standards that underlie email systems. Based on this understanding, they can implement sensible preservation strategies.’
‘The Preserving Email report provides a comprehensive advanced introduction to the topic for anyone who has to manage a large email archive in the long term: and in the long term that will be most of us.’
Gareth Knight of King’s College London welcomed the report. ‘Preserving Email provides an excellent overview of the topic, drawing together observations made in a number of research projects to provide a succinct overview of the legal, technical, and cultural issues that must be addressed to ensure that these digital assets can be curated and preserved in the long-term. Its conclusion, providing a set of pragmatic, easy-to-understand recommendations that individuals and institutions may apply to better manage their email archive, highlights the complexity of email preservation. It also sends a clear message that it is something that everyone can perform.’
The British Library is among the agencies currently working on new strategies to preserve email. Maureen Pennock of the British Library welcomed in particular the two short case studies which are included in the report. ‘The report includes case studies from the Bodleian Library and the Medical Research Council which are really useful in making sense of the practical problems which we face, and how to resolve them in practice not just theory. They show what can be achieved and underline just how useful the core email standards are.’
Neil Beagrie of Charles Beagrie Ltd, managing editor and principal investigator of the Technology Watch Series highlighted the plans for more reports in the series in the near future. ‘Preserving Email is the first of five planned publications from leading experts in the new DPC Technology Watch Series. The format of the new reports has had a major redesign, and ISSN and DOI identifiers have been added. We hope these features will enhance the use, citation and impact of the reports. Further reports on Preservation of Moving Picture and Sound, Intellectual Property Rights for Digital Preservation, Digital Forensics and Preservation, and Preservation Trust and Continuing Access for e-Journals will be released later in 2012. The DPC and Charles Beagrie hope the new series will be a significant contribution to encouraging digital preservation and best practice worldwide.’
Richard Ovenden, Deputy Director of the Bodleian Libraries at Oxford University and Chair of the DPC welcomed the report. ‘This is the tenth anniversary of the Coalition, which was launch in the House of Commons in February 2002. One of the ways we are marking this year is by releasing a new set of reports to update and extend the advice we offer. The Technology Watch Reports are a popular and lasting help to anyone interesting in ensuring that their digital memory available in the long term, and we work hard to ensure they are accessible as well as authoritative. This new report of Preserving Email will be particularly relevant to a wide readership so it’s a great way to kick off our tenth anniversary year.’
The report is online at: http://dx.doi.org/10.7207/twr11-01
Notes for editors
1. Preserving Email (DPC Technology Watch Report 11-01, ISSN 2048-7916, Digital Preservation Coalition 2011) was written by Chris Prom of the University of Illinois. It is published electronically as a PDF and is now free to download from the DPC website at: http://www.dpconline.org / … It was previously available as a preview to DPC members only from December 2011.
2. Chris Prom is the Assistant University Archivist at the University of Illinois, Urbana USA. During 2009–10, as part of his Fulbright Distinguished Scholar Award, Prom directed a research project at the Centre for Archive and Information Studies at the University of Dundee, Scotland, on ‘Practical Approaches to Identifying, Preserving, and Providing Access to Electronic Records’. This included a major focus on the preservation of email.
3. The report is published by the DPC in association with Charles Beagrie Ltd. Neil Beagrie, Director of Consultancy at Charles Beagrie Ltd, was commissioned to act as principal investigator for and managing editor of this Series in 2011. He has been further supported by an Editorial Board drawn from DPC members and peer reviewers who comment on texts prior to release.
4. The Digital Preservation Coalition (DPC) is an advocate and catalyst for digital preservation, enabling our members to deliver resilient long-term access to content and services, and helping them derive enduring value from digital collections. We raise awareness of the importance of the preservation of digital material and the attendant strategic, cultural and technological issues. We are a not-for-profit membership organisation and we support our members through knowledge exchange, capacity building, assurance, advocacy and partnership. Our vision is to make our digital memory accessible tomorrow. For more information about the DPC see: http://www.dpconline.org/
5. The Technology Watch Report series was established in 2002 and has been one of the Coalition’s most enduring contributions to the wider digital preservation community. They exist to provide authoritative support and foresight to those engaged with digital preservation or having to tackle digital preservation problems for the first time. These publications support members work forces, they identify disseminate and discuss best practice and they lower the barriers to participation in digital preservation. Each ‘Technology Watch Report’ analyses a particular topic pertinent to digital preservation and presents an evaluation of workable solutions, a review the potential of emerging solutions and posits solutions that might be appropriate for different contexts. The reports are written by leaders-in-the-field and are peer-reviewed prior to publication.
6. Future reports in the series include:
· Preserving Moving Picture and Sound, Richard Wright (BBC Research and Development)
· Digital Forensics for Preservation, Jeremy Leighton-John (British Library)
· Intellectual Property Rights for Digital Preservation, Andrew Charlesworth (Bristol University)
· Preservation, Trust and E-Journals, Neil Beagrie (Charles Beagrie Ltd)
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0 comments neil | Charles Beagrie Ltd, Digital Preservation, Libraries and Archives, Universities
I heard recently from a colleague that the Dutch Ministry of Education, Culture and Sciences has announced that the Dutch National Archives are to merge with the Dutch National Library (KB). Both institutions have been major players in digital preservation and in development of appropriate systems and practices for preserving digital records and publications respectively. The Dutch National Archives has implemented Tessella’s Safety Deposit Box whereas the KB has been working with IBM’s DIAS system since 2003 and is now developing a new architecture to replace it. The merger follows on from a series of mergers of national libraries and archives including Canada and more recently New Zealand.
0 comments neil | Digital Preservation, Libraries and Archives
Sharp-eyed visitors to the website will have noticed a series of upgrades and re-designs to the site over the past few months. The last of these is now complete. Some of the main updates are as follows:
Clients and Projects: We have introduced a new hierarchical format for the Clients page. You can now see a list of current and past clients in different sectors and request to see projects for them and finally project descriptions as needed. This re-design is to accommodate expanding work for the company and hopefully is less cluttered and easier to navigate as client and project information continues to grow. There is now also space to present a fully up to date clients list.
Presentations – our Recent Talks during 2011 have been added to the Publication page.
KRDS: Keeping Research Data Safe (KRDS): Cost/benefit studies, tools, and methodologies focussing on long-lived data has its own dedicated webpage and can be accessed via a tab from anywhere within the website.
RSS feed – you can subscribe by RSS feed to the Charles Beagrie Blog.
A very interesting presentation on Data Storage: IBM and Storage: Top Five Trends for 2012 from Steve Wojtowecz, vice president of storage software development at IBM on eWeek. Wojtowecz outlined five storage trends that will emerge in 2012: Data Preservation, Data Curation, Storage Analytics, Mass storage in Entertainment and Healthcare industries and Data Records Management (“Data Hoarders”). All major topics of interest to this blog with data preservation, data curation and even digital lives getting a mention. The article suggests “As storage becomes a key business driver in 2012, IBM officials said the industry will see new breakthroughs in storage research and business models coming from sectors such as entertainment and health care”. Worth a look.
0 comments neil | Digital Curation, Digital Preservation, Science and Industry