Subject: Preservation of electronic formats
Pete Jermann last week sent a report on "The Preservation of Electronic Formats", as presented by Dr. Michael Spring at the Preservation Intensive Institute at Pittsburgh, to this group. It was a very good summary, clearly very accurate, of what was probably a most interesting presentation. Let me if I may add a couple of points (and I'll refer to Spring, tho it's obviously from Jermann's notes): 1. Spring notes the importance for specialists of accounting for three kinds of potential loss: hardware obsolescence, software obsolescence, and decay of the medium. I call readers' attention to the publication from the Commission on Preservation and Access on this topic: Michael Lesk, Michael Lesk, Preservation of New Technology: A Report of the Technology Assessment Advisory Committee to the Commission on Preservation and Access (Washington, DC: CPA, 1992) (about 20 pp., about $5). Lesk covers much the same materials (in fact Jermann's summary is in some ways clearer) but in more detail and with more references. People interested in this topic should have Lesk's document to hand and should be aware of very strong Commission activity in this area. 2. There is another kind of preservation necessary for electronic information: intellectual preservation, or authentication, or preservation of the bit pattern itself. We need guarantees that the encoded pattern referred to by one person (perhaps the author, perhaps a later reader) is the same one that another reader wants to use, and that it has not been changed due to accident or intent (whether well-meant or fraudulent). There are cryptographically-based means of determining this which are coming into availability; I refer to them in my "Preserving the Intellectual Record and the Electronic Environment," Scholarly Communication and the Electronic Environment: Issues for Research Libraries, ed. Robert Sidney Martin (Chicago: ALA, 1993), p. 71-101. (Also published as: "Intellectual Preservation and the Electronic Environment," After the Electronic Revolution, Will You Be the First to Go?: Proceedings of the 1992 Association for Library Collections and Technical Services President's Program, ed. Arnold Hirshon (Chicago: ALA, 1993), p. 18-38.) The method of present interest is known as digital time-stamping, and has been produced by researchers at Bellcore. More information can be found in the cited articles or from me directly. I think it is important for librarians -- and especially preservation specialists -- to take account of the fundamental difference in our relation to electronic information: the artifact and the information are no longer one, and it is no longer sufficient simply to preserve the artifact in order to save the information. --pg Peter Graham Rutgers University Libraries 169 College Avenue New Brunswick, NJ 08903 908-932-5908 Fax:908-932-5888 *** Conservation DistList Instance 7:21 Distributed: Friday, August 20, 1993 Message Id: cdl-7-21-004 ***Received on Friday, 20 August, 1993