15.027 digital preservation: call for commercial expertise

From: by way of Willard McCarty (willard@lists.village.Virginia.EDU)
Date: Mon May 21 2001 - 01:33:04 EDT

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                    Humanist Discussion Group, Vol. 15, No. 27.
           Centre for Computing in the Humanities, King's College London
                   <http://www.princeton.edu/~mccarty/humanist/>
                  <http://www.kcl.ac.uk/humanities/cch/humanist/>

             Date: Mon, 21 May 2001 06:21:36 +0100
             From: NINCH-ANNOUNCE <david@ninch.org>
             Subject: CALL FOR INFORMATION ON COMMERCAL EXPERTISE ON DIGITAL
    PRESERVATION SOLUTIONS

    NINCH ANNOUNCEMENT
    News on Networking Cultural Heritage Resources
    from across the Community
    May 17, 2001

                     LIBRARY OF CONGRESS CALL FOR INFORMATION ON
              COMMERCAL EXPERTISE IN BORN-DIGITAL PRESERVATION SOLUTIONS

                 Replies to be directed to <hgladney@pacbell.net>

    As part of the start-up work of the new "National Digital Information
    Infrastructure and Preservation Program" at the Library of Congress, here
    is an important call for leads to commercial and industrial solutions to
    preservation problems of "born-digital" materials.

    Replies to Henry Gladney by June 8.

    David Green
    ===========

    >From: Jennifer Hodgeman <jhodgeman@nla.gov.au>
    >To: "'padiforum-l@nla.gov.au'" <padiforum-l@nla.gov.au>
    >>Date: Thu, 17 May 2001 16:59:04 +1000
    >Reply-To: padiforum-l@nla.gov.au

    This is being passed on for my colleague Henry Gladney. He and I are both
    members of the Audio Engineering Society Technical Committee on Archives
    Restoration and Digital Libraries.

    Henry has been asked by the Library of Congress to research the commercial
    sector to make sure that all items of interest have been uncovered. The last
    thing that the Library of Congress wishes to do is to reinvent the wheel
    with their $100,000,000 appropriation for digital archives.

    The goal of this Congressional Appropriation is to develop a national
    program to preserve the burgeoning amounts of digital information,
    especially materials that are created only in digital formats, to ensure
    their accessibility for current and future generations. As I read the
    attached information the Library of Congress has been given the lead in this
    project and is to work in conjunction with other agencies and libraries. The
    document appended at the bottom provides the appropriation legislation
    wording and some other background information.

    If you are aware of a commercial solution or are a provider of a commercial
    solution, please contact Dr. Gladney (see below). If you are aware of a
    large-scale project planned or undertaken undertaken by a corporation for
    archiving their own assets, please contact Dr. Gladney.

    This project will benefit us all as it will provide advancement for a
    unified framework to all of us under which we will be able to archive our
    own projects.

    Please respond to Dr. Gladney by close of business June 8th and please feel
    free to pass this on.

    Thank you very much.

    Richard L. Hess
    Principal Consultant
    National TeleConsultants
    Glendale, CA
    Personal: richard@richardhess.com www.richardhess.com

    ==============original message====================

    On behalf of an advisory committee convened by the Library of Congress, I am
    writing to ask for your help. Deanna Marcum, president of the Council on
    Information and Library Resources and a member of the advisory committee,
    has asked for a quick survey of technology and projects that would inform
    the Library in establishing a preservation program for "born digital"
    content.

    In case your associates are not aware of the project that stimulates this
    inquiry, I am attaching an article from the New York Times and a summary of
    the Congressional appropriation statement. For a comprehensive view of the
    underlying challenge, I recommend LC 21: A Digital Strategy for the Library
    of Congress, published by the National Academy Press about a year ago.

    Among the questions identified in the report is what relationships should
    exist between the Library's digital initiative and similar activities in
    other institutions. In setting priorities for the digital preservation
    program, I expect that the advisory committee will seek outside views about
    this and will be particularly interested in comments from organizations that
    have considered their own versions of that question.

    The committee is well informed about related activities in the federal
    government and universities. However, it is missing insight into the
    commercial and industrial sectors. The scope of the eventual archive is all
    kinds of "born digital" materials: books, papers, images, audio, and video.
    I believe that the Library's biggest challenge will be the immense amount of
    content available. The advisory committee will grapple with an initial
    selection policy, but collection policy is likely to be a perpetual
    question.

    To help the advisory committee achieve a quick start, I would be grateful
    for your help in identifying a few people who could lead us to understand in
    broad terms what is going on and what pools of expertise might be consulted.
    Please contact me at the address below.

    Regards, Henry

    Henry Gladney (408)867-5454
    20044 Glen Brae Drive, Saratoga CA 95070
    <http://home.pacbell.net/hgladney/>http://home.pacbell.net/hgladney/

    P.S. Please feel free to forward this request.
    ==========================================================================

    Here are the documents referred to as "attached"

    MAKING OMNIBUS CONSOLIDATED AND EMERGENCY SUPPLEMENTAL APPROPRIATIONS FOR
    FISCAL YEAR 2001 (Public Law 106554)

    LIBRARY OF CONGRESS

    SALARIES AND EXPENSES

    For the Library of Congress, $25,000,000, to remain available until
    expended, for necessary salaries and expenses of the National Digital
    Information Infrastructure and Preservation Program; and an additional
    $75,000,000 to remain available until expended, for such purposes:

    Provided, That the portion of such additional $75,000,000, which may be
    expended shall not exceed an amount equal to the matching contributions
    (including contributions other than money) for such purposes that (1) are
    received by the Librarian of Congress for the program from non-Federal
    sources, and (2) are received before March 31, 2003:

    Provided further, That such program shall be carried out in accordance with
    a plan or plans approved by the Committee on House Administration of the
    House of Representatives, the Committee on Rules and Administration of the
    Senate, the Committee on Appropriations of the House of Representatives,
    and the Committee on Appropriations of the Senate:

    Provided further, That of the total amount appropriated, $5,000,000 may be
    expended before the approval of a plan to develop such a plan, and to
    collect or preserve essential digital information which otherwise would be
    uncollectible:

    Provided further, That the balance in excess of such $5,000,000 shall not
    be expended without approval in advance by the Committee on Appropriations
    of the House of Representatives and the Committee on Appropriations of the
    Senate:

    Provided further, That the plan under this heading shall be developed by
    the Librarian of Congress jointly with entities of the Federal government
    with expertise in telecommunications technology and electronic commerce
    policy (including the Secretary of Commerce and the Director of the White
    House
    Office of Science and Technology Policy) and the National Archives and
    Records Administration, and with the participation of representatives of
    other Federal, research, and private libraries and institutions with
    expertise in the collection and maintenance of archives of digital materials
    (including the National Library of Medicine, the National Agricultural
    Library, the National Institute of Standards and Technology, the Research
    Libraries Group, the Online Computer Library Center, and the Council on
    Library and Information Resources) and representatives of private business
    organizations which are involved in efforts to preserve, collect, and
    disseminate information in digital formats (including the Open eBook Forum):
    Provided further, That notwithstanding any other provision of law, effective
    with the One Hundred Seventh Congress and each succeeding Congress the
    chair of the Subcommittee on the Legislative Branch of the Committee on
    Appropriations of the House of Representatives shall serve as a member of
    the Joint Committee on the Library with respect to the Library's financial
    management, organization, budget development and implementation, and
    program development and administration, as well as any other element of the
    mission of the Library of Congress which is subject to the requirements of
    Federal law.

    MAKING OMNIBUS CONSOLIDATED AND EMERGENCY SUPPLEMENTAL APPROPRIATIONS FOR
    FISCAL YEAR 2001 (Public Law 106554)

    Statement of Managers Language from the Conference Report (House Report
    1061033)

    LIBRARY OF CONGRESS

    SALARIES AND EXPENSES

    The agreement provides $100,000,000 to the Library of Congress to establish
    a national digital information infrastructure and preservation program. Of
    this amount, $25,000,000 is provided immediately and remains available until
    expended. An additional amount up to $75,000,000 is provided to match
    dollar-for-dollar any nonfederal contributions to this program, including
    in-kind contributions, that are received before March 31, 2003. The
    information and technology industry that has created this new medium should
    be a contributing partner in addressing digital access and preservation
    issues inherent in the new digital information environment. This program is
    a major undertaking to develop standards and a nationwide collecting
    strategy to build a national repository of digital materials.

    The Library is directed to develop a phased implementation plan for this
    program jointly with Federal entities with expertise in telecommunications
    technology and electronic commerce policy and with participation of other
    Federal and non-Federal entities. After consultation with the Joint Committee
    on the Library, membership of which is changed to include the chair of the
    Legislative Subcommittee of the Committee on Appropriations of the House of
    Representatives, the Library shall seek approval of the program plan from
    the Committee on House Administration, the Committee on Rules and
    Administration of the Senate, and the Committees on Appropriations of the
    House of Representatives and the Senate. The Library of Congress is
    authorized to expend up to $5,000,000, before approval of the plan, for the
    development of the plan and for collecting or preserving digital information
    that may otherwise vanish during the plan development and approval cycle.

    The overall plan should set forth a strategy for the Library of Congress, in
    collaboration with other Federal and non-Federal entities, to identify a
    national network of libraries and other organizations with responsibilities
    for collecting digital materials that will provide access to and maintain
    those materials. In addition to developing this strategy, the plan shall set
    forth, in concert with the Copyright Office, the policies, protocols, and
    strategies for the long-term preservation of such materials, including the
    technological infrastructure required at the Library of Congress. In
    developing the plan, the Library should be mindful of the conclusions drawn
    in a recent National Academy of Sciences report concerning the Library's
    trend toward insularity and isolation from its clients and peers in the
    transition toward digital content.

               Library to Lead National Effort to Develop Digital Information
    Infrastructure and Preservation Program: U.S. Congress Provides $100
    Million Special Appropriation in Support of Project
               The Library of Congress has been empowered by the U. S. Congress to
    develop a national program to preserve the burgeoning amounts of digital
    information, especially materials that are created only in digital formats,
    to ensure their accessibility for current and future generations.
               The Library of Congress began in 1998 to develop a digital strategy
    with a group of senior managers assessing the roles and responsibilities of
    the Library in the electronic environment. At the same time, Librarian of
    Congress James H. Billington commissioned the National Research Council
    Computer Science and Telecommunications Board of the National Academy of
    Sciences (NAS) to evaluate the Library's readiness to meet the challenges of
    the rapidly evolving digital world.
               The NAS report, LC 21: A Digital Strategy for the Library of
    Congress, recommended that the Library, working with other federal and
    non-federal institutions, take the lead in a national, cooperative effort to
    archive and preserve digital information.
               "This collaborative strategy will permit the long-term acquisition,
    storage and preservation of digital materials, that will assure access to
    the growing electronic historical and cultural record of our nation," said
    Dr. Billington. "Just as the Congress enabled the Library of Congress to
    begin the last century by making its printed catalog cards widely available,
    the Congress has enabled its Library to begin this century by building a
    digital record and making it available in the information age." In December
    2000, the 106th Congress appropriated $100 million for this effort, which
    instructs the Library to spend an initial $25 million to develop and execute
    a congressionally approved strategic plan for a National Digital Information
    Infrastructure and Preservation Program. Congress specified that, of this
    amount, $5 million may be spent during the initial phase for planning as
    well as the acquisition and preservation of digital information that may
    otherwise vanish.
               The legislation authorizes as much as $75 million of federal funding
    to be made available as this amount is matched by nonfederal donations,
    including in-kind contributions, through March 31, 2003. The effect of a
    government-wide recission of .22 percent in late December was to reduce this
    special appropriation to $99.8 million.
               The Library will consult with federal partners to assess joint
    planning considerations for shared responsibilities. The Library will also
    seek participation from the nonfederal sector and will execute its overall
    strategy in cooperation with the library, creative, publishing, technology
    and copyright communities in this country and abroad.
               The legislation calls for the Library to work jointly with the
    Secretary of Commerce, the director of the White House Office of Science and
    Technology Policy, and the National Archives and Records Administration. The
    legislation also directs the Library to seek the participation of "other
    federal, research and private libraries and institutions with expertise in
    the collection and maintenance of archives of digital materials," including
    the National Library of Medicine, the National Agricultural Library, the
    Research Libraries Group, the Online Computer Library Center and the Council
    on Library and Information Resources.
               Laura Campbell, the Library's recently appointed Associate Librarian
    for Strategic Initiatives, will oversee these efforts. She noted that, "as
    the national library and home of the U.S. Copyright Office, the Library of
    Congress must lead this effort, which poses enormous challenges and exciting
    opportunities. To succeed, we must have broad participation from the public
    and private sectors."
                                               New York Times, January 12, 2001,
    Contact: Guy Lamolinara (202) 707-9217

    Richard L. Hess richard@richardhess.com
    Glendale, CA
    USA
    <http://www.richardhess.com/>http://www.richardhess.com/
    Web page: folk and church music, photography, and
                        broadcast engineering
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