1 / 32

Evelyn Wareham Programme Manager, Digital Sustainability

Digital continuity: current problems, ongoing trends and [Archives NZ’s] solutions Presentation for Auckland Recordkeeping Forum. Evelyn Wareham Programme Manager, Digital Sustainability. The Wild Frontier?. Public records include: Email Text messages Databases GIS Voice recordings

Download Presentation

Evelyn Wareham Programme Manager, Digital Sustainability

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Digital continuity: current problems, ongoing trends and [Archives NZ’s] solutionsPresentation for Auckland Recordkeeping Forum Evelyn Wareham Programme Manager, Digital Sustainability

  2. The Wild Frontier? Public records include: Email Text messages Databases GIS Voice recordings Audiovisual recordings Websites Wikis, blogs, etc.

  3. Volume

  4. Formats

  5. Software Application software Operating System Display

  6. Data corruption Only one bit of a Byte is corrupted in this image!

  7. “Houston, we have a problem”

  8. “The preservation of authentic digital records is a continuous process that begins with the process of records creation and whose purpose is to transmit authentic records across time and space” Interpares Strategy Task Force Report, Principle Four http://www.interpares.org/display_file.cfm?doc=ip1_stf_report.pdf

  9. A Brief History of Digital Continuity

  10. Open Archival Information OAIS

  11. Popular Myths? (Chris Rusbridge) Digital preservation is very expensive -- not compared to print preservation File formats become obsolete very rapidly -- slower than thought Interventions must occur frequently so costs stay high – less is more Digital preservation repositories should have very long timescale aspirations -- adjust to funding, prepare succession http://www.ariadne.ac.uk/issue46/rusbridge/ (2006)

  12. Where Are We Now? International Congress on Archives, Kuala Lumpur 2008 Shift of focus to practice Many examples of digital archives systems: Korea, Malaysia, Switzerland, Netherlands, France, Australia, etc Useful experiences to share Digital preservation = community

  13. Collaborative Research and Practice Archives, libraries, science / research sectors, arts, academics Preservation planning services Methodologies, tools and services Preservation action tools Testbeds and prototypes Aim for dissemination and take-up

  14. Shift to Practical - InterPARES III

  15. Interesting Trends Out of the box software E.g. Safety Deposit Box (Tessella Support Services and The National Archives UK) Malaysia Switzerland Netherlands and others Further developments for each implementation Open source add-ons

  16. Obstacles? Transfer a problematic concept Slow rates of transfer to established digital archives Most common transfers from last resort context Agencies keeping copies of records Mixed approaches to access Still an afterthought, with focus on preservation? (e.g. Swiss handling of databases) Often access is through existing finding aids systems Agency access interface for direct transfers (e.g. France)

  17. Shared Services for (Non-Archival) Information

  18. Integrated Digital RM and Archives - Korea

  19. What’s Archives New Zealand Doing? Digital Continuity is ensuring digital information remains available and useable for as long as it is needed New programme team Digital Continuity Strategy development (Budget 07 support) Trialling Interim Digital Archive for digital archives Considering shared service possibilities

  20. What’s in a name? Digital sustainability Digital continuity Digital recordkeeping futures Digital archive Digital repository Digital library Digital preservation Digital curation

  21. Digital Continuity Strategy

  22. Digital Continuity Strategy A whole of government approach to a whole of government issue Mandated under the Digital Strategy 2.0 and supports the Digital Content Strategy Need common vision, approach and understanding of roles Interdepartmental strategic advisory group Consultative process

  23. Digital Continuity Strategy: Key Messages There when you need it. Information will be maintained as long as needed. Some is needed only for a few months, some forever. Authentic and reliable. Information is tamper-proof and free of technological rights restrictions. It can be trusted to be authentic and reliable. Trusted access. New Zealanders can be confident that can find and use information that is publicly available, and that their sensitive information will be protected from unauthorised access. Do nothing, lose everything. If no action is taken, public sector digital information will be lost. We need a proactive approach to maintain information for the future.

  24. Draft Digital Continuity Strategy Draft Digital Continuity Strategy Vision: Information is trusted and accessible when it is needed, now and in the future. Goals: Understanding Well-managed from Day One Infrastructure Significant Information Preserved Trusted Access Good Governance

  25. Next steps Wider consultation Sep-Nov 2008 Review and make changes Dec 2008 Final Strategy to Cabinet early 2009

  26. Archives NZ - Interim Digital Archive

  27. How the Interim Digital Archive Works

  28. Ingest and Normalisation

  29. Interim Digital Archive - Principles Enables some transfers of public archives Opportunity to learn and build capability Minimal solution Automation wherever possible Manual supporting process acceptable Open source No direct online public access Also used for digitised content

  30. Don’t forget! It’s all about digital: The public records and archives of today and tomorrow will be in digital formats. Archives New Zealand is supporting digital continuity across the broader public sector. Do nothing, lose everything: if we don’t actively manage digital records and archives, we will have nothing in the future. We need to work together: Archives New Zealand is looking for partners to help trial new systems with real data – are you interested?

More Related