NDSA:Digital Preservation Page -- draft outline
- Scope of article
- Synonyms (e.g., digital archiving, long-term digital preservation)
- Not included, maybe related articles (e.g. intellectual property issues, privacy, selection for preservation, asset management, content management)
- Definition of digital preservation (generic, high level)
- Challenges of digital preservation (generic, high level)
- Identification of digital preservation communities (e.g., research libraries, national libraries, archives, governments, scientific communities, geospatial and observational data communities, architecture and design industry, video and film industry, broadcast industry)
- Research library and “memory institutions’” digital preservation efforts
- History of engagement / involvement; relationship to institutional repository movement
- Organizations engaged in digital preservation planning (U.S. only? See Initiatives and Programs below), e.g., NDSA, PASIG, etc.
- Use cases (converted analog, born-digital documents, images, audio-visual material, data sets, observational data, electronic records, email, CAD-CAM content, digital games, mixed archival collections; digitization as sole preservation strategy for audio and moving images; computer software, dance performances; Web sites; social media archives; databases )
- Issues, assumptions, approaches, best practices [THIS SECTION COULD BE BETTER STRUCTURED]
- Refreshing, cyclical re-copying
- Replication
- Content preservation versus object preservation
- Migration vs. emulation
- Data integrity, provenance, versioning
- Metadata considerations (types of metadata, objectives of metadata)
- “Dark archiving” versus access-oriented strategies
- Digital file format preservation issues
- Digital forensics
- Current and evolving technical standards (discussion)
- [branch to listing of individual standards and practices]
- “Trusted digital repository” framework
- History and current status (TRAC, Drambora)
- Issues addressed in current frameworks
- Metrics for assessment
- Certification strategies
- Digital curation
- Preservation of original hardware and software access systems
- Storage and OS considerations
- Sustainability and economic models for preservation
- Open source systems and tools (e.g., Fedora, JHOVE, PRONOM)
- Vendor-provided systems and tools (e.g., Rosetta)
- Preservation Initiatives and programs
- United States
- NDSA, LOCKSS, Hathi Trust, Portico, MetaArchive, CDL, Internet Archive, CRL, consortia, etc. -- mostly links to other articles
- United Kingdom
- Digital Preservation Coalition (DPC)
- Europe
- CASPAR, PLANETS, TIMBUS
- [Other countries, regions]
- United States
- Preservation-oriented conferences and meetings (e.g., iPres)
- Granting agencies supporting digital preservation
- Other Preservation-Related Domains and Communities - [NOTE: The following are additional communities with somewhat different considerations and approaches in the area of digital preservation. While domain-specific published and defacto standards may in many cases be the same as those used in the research library community – and could be referenced from within the sections below -- best practices and use cases will differ. NDSA would not necessarily take any responsibility for these sections, so they are for now notional.)
- Digital preservation in the scientific and geospatial community
- Digital preservation in the architecture community
- Digital preservation in the domain of “personal digital preservation” (e.g., LC’s personal preservation initiative)
- Digital preservation in the broadcast media community
- Digital preservation in the audio engineering industry
- [Others contributed by other communities]