1) The document discusses the importance of preserving digital scholarly content as more becomes available online. It notes that currently around 75% of e-journals are at risk of being lost without preservation efforts.
2) The Keepers Registry is highlighted as a tool that tracks which archiving organizations are preserving which e-journals. The goal is for near 100% of content to be preserved by 2020.
3) Actions are discussed that libraries, publishers, and archiving organizations can take to improve preservation efforts and reduce the amount of content at risk, such as developing archive clauses for licensing agreements.
social pharmacy d-pharm 1st year by Pragati K. Mahajan
Who is looking after your e-journals? The Keepers Registry in 2020
1. Who is looking after your e-journals?
Telling Tales About The Keepers Registry
& Your Digital Shelves
Peter Burnhill& Françoise Pelle
EDINA, University of Edinburgh, UK
ISSN International Centre / Centre International de l'ISSN, Paris, France
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/
IFLA World Library and Information Congress, Singapore, August 2013:
Congress track 5: Ideas, innovations, anticipating the new
Agile management: strategies for achieving success in rapidly changing times (Session 98)
‘Knowledge Management’ and ‘Academic & Research Libraries’
2. Knowledge Management and
3. UNESCO “The Memory of the World in the Digital age: Digitization and
Preservation”:preservation … of digital documentary heritage.
September 2012, Vancouver (with IFLA/ICA)
“Unless digital preservation becomes a development
priority … the risk of digital records not surviving for
an appreciable length of time will increase”
Vancouver Declaration
• recommended strategy, frameworks, copyright exceptions &
limitations, collaboration & training, standardization, format registries, products &
leadership
Agile Management: strategies for achieving success in rapidly changing times
delight (not disappoint) customers;self-organising
teams;dynamic linking;values for innovation over long term;
stories & conversation, not commands;measuring outcomes
(outside in); re-thinking timeframe&objectives
:
1. IFLA Key Initiative 1 - Digital Content Programme
2. IFLA Strategic Programme on Preservation and Conservation (PAC)
Academic &Research Libraries
3. … is to ensure ease and continuity of access to
the scholarly & cultural record
And we all know what has changed …
• a significant/growing proportion of that scholarly & cultural
record is in digital format and available across the Web
First, The Good NewsWhat was once availablylocallyis now
online & accessed remotely, anytime/anywhere
Now The Bad News! Academic libraries are no longer
the custodians of the scholarly record
– What is on the Web one day is changed or disappeared the next
– We need to invest in some digital shelves!
Key task for academic & research libraries
4. Focus on international challenge of e-journals
Researchers (and therefore libraries) in any one country
are dependent upon content written and published in other countries
US.LoC 20%
UK.BL 10%
‘hidden’ e-journals:
low % ISSN
Netherlands
& Germany:
c. 4.5% each
Brazil 4%
%age of the 100,000 ISSN issued for e-serials
5. Many Reports over past 10 Years …
They highlighted risks in digital media& formats:
• „digital decay‟: format obsolescence& bit rot
and warned against single points of failure:
• natural disasters (earthquake, fire and flood)
• human folly (criminal and political action): hacking
+ risks associated with commercial events in the
publisher/supply chain
•eDepot at KoninklijkeBibliotheek
• international significance(Elsevier &Kluwer) as well as national
role for The Netherlands)
•the LOCKSS project at Stanford University
• from which came CLOCKSS
•the Electronic-Archiving Initiative at JSTOR
• from which came Portico
… as early archiving initiatives emerged
6. Many Reports over past 10 Years …
They highlighted risks in digital media& formats:
• „digital decay‟: format obsolescence& bit rot
and warned against single points of failure:
• natural disasters (earthquake, fire and flood)
• human folly (criminal and political action): hacking
+ risks associated with commercial events in the
publisher/supply chain
•eDepot at KoninklijkeBibliotheek
• international significance(Elsevier &Kluwer) as well as national
role for The Netherlands)
•the LOCKSS project at Stanford University
• from which came CLOCKSS
•the Electronic-Archiving Initiative at JSTOR
• from which came Portico
… as early archiving initiatives emerged
Those reports mentioned the idea of a Registry
“by which it would be plain what content was being archived, and
therefore what was not” (CLIR Report, 2006)
In 2008, Jisc, acting on behalf of UK universities,commissioned a Study
which confirmed the need for such a Registry.
In 2009, EDINA & ISSN-IC began to design that
Registry, working with e-Depot, LOCKSS, CLOCKSS &
Portico
• We reported this at IFLA Gothenburg, 2010
7. ISSN
Register
E-J Preservation Registry Service
E-Journal
Preservation
Registry
SERVICES: user
requirements
(a)
(b)
Data
dependency
ISSN-L as
kernel field
METADATA
on extant e-journals
METADATA
on preservation action
ISSN Register at the heart of the Data Model
(Taken from Figure 1 in reference paper in Serials, March 2009)
Digital Preservation
Agencies
e.g. CLOCKSS, Portico; BL, KB;
UK LOCKSS Alliance etc.
9. 9
… but coverage
of volumes is
partial & patchy
This e-journal is being archived
by 5 archiving agencies …
Example search: ‘Origins of Life’
… and discover details of its „archival status‟
10. Using metadata reported by all Keepers …
… we note that
c.21,000 e-serials
are reported as
being ‘preserved’
=> Does this mean that 79% of the 100,000
e-serials assigned with ISSN are at risk of loss?
11. Look into the future with 2020 Vision …
• Best Case scenario for IFLA 2020
– Libraries (& Publishers) have acted to reduce that
alarming 79% figure down to near to zero
– All e-journal content now used by researchers in 2013
has been preserved & can be successfully used in 2020,
and assuredly beyond for future generations.
• Worst Case scenario for IFLA 2020
– Libraries (& Publishers) have failed to act
– Important literature has been lost
– Citizens & scholars complain of neglect!
12. Reminder about the real heroes in the story,
3 types of Keeper:
① web-scale not-for-profitarchiving agencies
e.g. CLOCKSS Archive* &Portico* [*project start]
②national libraries (sometimes with legal deposit in mind)
e.g.e-Depot* (Netherlands); British Library*
&National Science Library of China
③ research libraries: consortia & specialist centres
e.g. Global LOCKSS Network*, HathiTrust,
Scholars Portal, Archaeology Data Service
*news* US Library of Congress in process of joining
13. Many archiving organisations is a Good Thing
“Digital information is best preserved by replicating it at
multiple archives run by autonomous organizations”
B. Cooper and H. Garcia-Molina (2002)
The Keepers Registry acts as the global lens onto
their activity: so we can all know who is looking after
what, and what is still at risk …
Kaisu!
14. What does the Registry tell about progress?
• c.100,000 ISSN for online resources
– but expect / hope to identify many more
• Is there such thing as a „priority list‟ of titles?
– c.30,000 refereed scholarly journals
• Do we look at on what individual libraries list?
– In 2012 we checked „archival status‟ for 3 large university libraries
• Two key indicators: %age (& number) of titles that are ‘at risk of loss’
%age (& number) of titles that are ‘preserved by 3 or more Keepers’.
c.75%
„at risk‟
c.11%
held by
3 or more
15. What does the Registry tell about progress?
• c.100,000 ISSN for online resources
– but expect / hope to identify many more
• Is there such thing as a „priority list‟ of titles?
– c.30,000 refereed scholarly journals
• Do we look at on what individual libraries list?
– In 2012 we checked „archival status‟ for 3 large university libraries
• Two key indicators: %age (& number) of titles that are ‘at risk of loss’
%age (& number) of titles that are ‘preserved by 3 or more Keepers’.
c.75%
„at risk‟
c.11%
held by
3 or more
*news* In new release of the online Registry, each and every
library can ‘upload & compare’ to discover what of their
collection is being preserved, or is ‘at risk’.
16. Sidebar note on monitoring their progress …Your Priorities for The Keepers Registry?
• Need to establish international, multi-sector governance
– building on Jisc funding, the Registry must command consensus & be
sustainable over the long-term. Who then should govern & fund this?
1. Make sure the Keepers Registry serves your needs
– Periodic report of those 2 key indicators: :
• %age (& number) of titles that are ‘at risk of loss’
• %age (& number) of titles that are ‘preserved by 3 or more Keepers’
– Making clear terms of access to orphaned content
• preferably available to all „open access‟ across the Internet
– Listing the serial titles „at risk‟
– Disclosing the relevant publishers to assist libraries & archiving agencies
– …
17. Sidebar note on monitoring their progress …Your Priorities for The Keepers Registry?
• Need to establish international, multi-sector governance
– building on Jisc funding, the Registry must command consensus & be
sustainable over the long-term. Who then should govern & fund this?
1. Make sure the Keepers Registry serves your needs
2. Keep a close focus on volumes & issues: this takes hard work!
3. Assist the ISSN Network assign more ISSN
– If it is worth preserving, it should have an identifier: ‘hidden e-journals’
4. Encourage more organisations to be Keepers in the Registry
– including every national library that acts as an archive
The Registry is not an audit / certification authority but need for
eligibility checks for integrity of „archival intent‟
5. Assist collaboration between Keepers in „a safe places
network‟: many are meeting at iPres 2013 in Lisbon in September
18. True meh uncle?
– Yes lah!
• More and more scholarly statement is issued on the Web
• Often with no obvious „country of publication‟
– New „scholarly objects‟; rich in data or with dependent links to data
– Increasing use of HTTP URL/URI to cite resources & work of others
– Content at URI can and does change, or even cease to be
• R&D at Mellon-funded Hiberlinkproject at U. of Edinburgh / LANL
• and more and more is Open Access
– issued in OA journals or via repositories such as Arkiv
• and then there is the Internet Archive, and figshare, and ..
– Is someone else running the global library of the future?
But still necessary to preserve e-journal content!
Still sufficient in the mainstream, although should also engage with the „new now‟
Surely, Scholarly Record is more than e-journals?
19. <recap> Agile Management (for academic & research libraries):
strategies for achieving success in rapidly changing times
1. delight (not disappoint) customers/patrons (researchers, students, teachers)
– Ensure that there really is continuity of access in 2020 and beyond
• If not for e-journals, then who will believe you can do more challenging digital preservation?
2. enable self-organising teams
– Give material support to more than one of the Keepers
– Require publishers to entrust content to an archiving organisation
3. favour dynamic linking
– Keepers to ‘publish’ holdings for machine-access (& terms of access)
• Keepers Registry to do likewise, to allow others to display „archival status‟
4. measure outcome (from outside in): Use The Keepers Registry as lens
5. Shift to a set of values, that creates innovation over the long term: not just
budgets & cost-effective access; not just national libraries as stewards
6. re-think time, re-think objective: regain the trust put in libraries!
7. implement with stories & conversation, not commands:
– ‘Research libraries saved the day, because they acted to …’
20. Securing the future with 2020 Vision…
Actions needed to achieve good news at IFLA 2020
– to reduce that alarming 75% „at risk‟ figure down towards zero
• Individual actions by each research library
– give material support to one or more archiving agency
– consider an „archive clause‟ in licences
• requiring publishers to deposit content with an archiving organisation
• Collective actions
– to develop that model „archive clause‟ requiring deposit with an archive
– to engage with publisher associations, internationally and nationally
• Many e-journals are from small publishers: „long tail problem‟
• Role for consortia and/or subscription agents?
– to act globally, not leaving matters to each country
• Using legal deposit in national library as a back-up
• Use the Keepers Registry to monitor progress
21. IFLA Key Initiative 1 - Digital Content Programme:
• to build a legal, technical & professional base that enables libraries to play a major
role in collecting, preserving … to all types of physical &digital materials:
• digital preservation – with a focus on legal mechanisms [*] for harvesting and preserving
born digital information and local content hosted on websites and in social media
Activities: Develop and endorse the IFLA Statement on Legal Deposit [*]
Pushing at an (IFLA) open door?
22. * Legal Deposit: a sidebar note
Should we wait upon that and action by National Libraries?
• 44% national libraries had legislation in 2011 for e-books or e-
journals; expected to rise to 58% by June 2012.
• But only 27% [expected to rise to 37% by June 2012] actually
ingesting via legal deposit
Others have collected by voluntary deposit (esp.Netherlands)
Key point is not to object to the call for ‘legal deposit’,
but it is taking too much time, and is not sufficient
Even if the slowness is usually down to the actions of government and
publishers, not the national libraries.
Only KB e-Depot, BL, NSLC (+ LoC) in The Keepers Registry
Need to encourage others to join so we will all know about their activity
from presentation, CENL 2011 Survey by Lynne Brindley
to CDNL Annual Meeting Puerto Rico, 15/8/11
*Reminder* Researchers (and therefore libraries) in any one country
are dependent upon content written and published in other countries
23. The Strategic Programme on Preservation and Conservation (PAC)
“has one major goal : to ensure that library and archive materials… in all
formats, will be preserved in accessible form for as long as possible according
to the following principles :
– preservation is essential for survival & development of culture &
scholarship
– international cooperation is a key principle
– each country must accept responsibility for the preservation of its
own publications. [yes, but …]
Pushing at an (IFLA) open door?
E-journals, and online serials more generally, are a big part of the scholarly record – if we use the distribution of assigned ISSN as a guide, then we have some measure of just how international is the problem space:- centering the map on Singapore, Asia and the Pacific for a change yes a lot is published in US,UK, Netherlands and Germany – but over 60% is not – and that is an underestimate because so many online serials in countries in the centre of this map do not have ISSN assigned – they remain hidden to our arithmetic.
A brief history of e-journal initiativesLeading up to the realisation of an early idea for a Registryhttp://www.jisc-collections.ac.uk/Reports/e-journal-archiving-comparative-study/
A brief history of e-journal initiativesLeading up to the realisation of an early idea for a Registryhttp://www.jisc-collections.ac.uk/Reports/e-journal-archiving-comparative-study/
<read screen>
Time to tell stories about the futureand to consider what needs to be doneSeven years is within the working lives of many if not most here; the responsibility is shared by all.
So, where are those digital shelves – who has stepped forward?The first two archiving organisations, CLOCKSS & Portico, should be well known to you all. Both helped in the project from the start, each with quite different approaches to long term preservation and to access to triggered content. Plusses and minuses you might say.Next there are an increasing number of national libraries – with the Dutch e-Depot having international significance because of the likes of Elsevier & Kluwer, although Elsevier also participate actively in both CLOCKSS & Portico. Then there are library consortium and specialists, HathiTrust being very interesting because of its focus on digitised journals – which now can get an ISSN assigned.
This session speaks of Agile Management – so how can it help?
As with all global challenges – and this ranks up there – actions are possible and necessary at different levelswith library decision making powers on priorities & trigger eventswith open access to orphaned or abandoned contenthttp://www.jisc-collections.ac.uk/nesli2/NESLi2-Model-Licence-/