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Adventures of Wilf in the Digital Stacks

Sally McInnes

Sally McInnes

Last updated on 2 November 2022

Sally McInnes is Head of Unique and Contemporary Content Department at the National Library of Wales


Today is World Digital Preservation Day and an opportunity to highlight the work undertaken by the National Library of Wales to ensure that digital content is preserved for the future.  In order to raise general awareness of issues relating to enabling on-going access to  digital content, which affect personal as well as organisational data, I would like to introduce you to Wilf.

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World Digital Preservation Day 2022: Data For All, For Good, Forever

Kirsten Hylan

Kirsten Hylan

Last updated on 2 November 2022

This blogpost has been written by St George’s, University of London (SGUL) Archivist Juulia Ahvensalmi, Research Data Support Manager Michelle Harricharan, and Records Manager Kirsten Hylan.


‘Data for All, For Good, Forever’ is the theme of this year’s World Digital Preservation Day, demonstrating how digital preservation allows ‘digits to flourish’.  What an apt theme for a university that has been transforming health and medical care since 1733! Whether it is developing the earlier practices of variolation into vaccination (introduced by Edward Jenner in 1798) that eventually eradicated smallpox or transforming health practice though our pioneering work in infection and immunity, population health and molecular and clinical research, for St George’s data has always been for good, for all and, with proper care, forever. This post will consider how by preserving records and data regardless of format that are held in the archives and currently being developed by our staff, we are not only ensuring we maintain our history, but that St George’s continues to contribute to ground-breaking medical research by allowing digits to flourish.

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Title: Preservation Digitisation Project – Digitising the Tasmanian Archives audio visual collection

Karin Haveman

Karin Haveman

Last updated on 3 November 2022

Karin Haveman is Acting Manager Government Archives and Preservation at the Tasmanian Archives and Digitisation Services Coordinator


In February 2021, Libraries Tasmania launched the Preservation Digitisation Project – a major collaborative project that brings together Digitisation Services, System Support and Delivery, Government Archives, and the Community Archives teams. The aim of this project is to digitise our Tasmanian film, sound, and video collections for long-term preservation and to provide greater access to our collections for the public. Our priority is our magnetic tape collection which is at great risk of being lost forever if not digitised before 2025 (NFSA paper: Deadline 2025 | National Film and Sound Archive of Australia (nfsa.gov.au))

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Let business records flourish!

Jenny Mitcham

Jenny Mitcham

Last updated on 2 November 2022

It is always good to be able to release new resources on World Digital Preservation Day and this year is no exception. The resource I’m going to talk about isn’t exactly a ‘new’ resource, it was originally published and promoted by the Archives and Records Council Wales (ARCW) back in August, but they generously agreed that the work could be repackaged and re-released on the DPC website to ensure that a wider and more international audience could also benefit from it.

Why am I so excited to get this particular resource out on World Digital Preservation Day? Well the theme of World Digital Preservation Day this year is particularly inclusive - ‘Data For All, For Good, Forever’. Much of the work that I do at the DPC tends to have a focus on working with people who are already part of our community, and are already sold on the idea that digital preservation is ‘A Good Thing’. This is all good, but sometimes I am aware of the echo chamber within which I tend to reside.

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Funding digital preservation skills development

Natalie M. Baur

Natalie M. Baur

Last updated on 3 November 2022

Natalie Baur is Program Director for DPOE-N


Happy World Digital Preservation Day from your colleagues at the Digital Preservation Outreach and Education Network (DPOE-N)! We are excited to celebrate this important day with you, and we wanted to share some of our resources and funding opportunities that are available to the community. 

DPOE-N was created by the Library of Congress in 2010 to provide digital preservation training across the U.S. The program transitioned to Pratt Institute School of Information and New York University’s Moving Image Archiving and Preservation program in 2018 to further develop it and support it into the future. In 2020, DPOE-N received a two-year grant from the Mellon Foundation to support its operations. In 2022, DPOE-N received two more years of grant funding from the Mellon Foundation.

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Digipres resources for all, for good, forever

Andrew Jackson

Andrew Jackson

Last updated on 3 November 2022

Andy Jackson (@anjacks0n/@anj@digipres.club) & Paul Wheatley (@prwheatley) have shared this post on behalf of all the digipres.org contributors.


Calling All Digital Preservers!

The digital preservation community is small and under resourced. This means we must work together if we want to make the biggest impact. To this end, a small group of us have been attempting to help the members of the digital preservation community better support each other. On World Digital Preservation Day, we'd like to encourage you all to (re)discover what we've built so far:

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Reviving Digital Preservation Policies at National Library of New Zealand

Martin Gengenbach

Martin Gengenbach

Last updated on 2 November 2022

Martin Gengenbach is Digital Preservation Policy and Outreach Specialist, National Library of New Zealand


There are many resources to help an organisation draft its first digital preservation policy, including the excellent guide provided by the DPC. There is less information about reviewing and revising policy documentation - though most policy guides recommend a regular process for doing so. Announcing an existing policy revision probably doesn’t sound as exciting as promoting a new digital preservation policy. Once completed, should policy review simply become an unheralded act, subsumed into business as usual?

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Digital preservation at the National Library of Australia

Libor Coufal

Libor Coufal

Last updated on 2 November 2022

Libor Coufal is Assistant Director for Digital Preservation at the National Library of Australia


We are very mindful that it has been (not quite all, but mostly) quiet on the NLA communication front in the last several years, while we have busily worked on implementing our digital preservation program. Our attendance at this year’s iPres (our first since 2014) was a great opportunity to pause and reflect on the progress we have made. We would like to update the community on what we have been up to and the things we have achieved.

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For all, for good, forever

William Kilbride

William Kilbride

Last updated on 2 November 2022

World Digital Preservation Day 2022 has arrived.

You might be looking at your watch and thinking it’s still only Wednesday 2nd and not even close to midnight wher you are, but World Digital Preservation Day is a global event.  So as the working day begins across the Pacific Ocean, so it's time to get this show on the road.

The theme of World Digital Preservation Day 2022 is ‘Data for all, for good, forever.  I am looking forward to a global outpouring of blogs and presentations and tweets and songs and cakes which celebrate and interpret this theme.  Almost anyone working in or thinking about digital preservation can have something to say about a theme as open as this.  The day has two broad purposes: to raise awareness about the digital preservation challenge; and to help a growing but widely distributed community connect with each other.

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Community is at the Heart of iPres

Brendan Power

Brendan Power

Last updated on 28 October 2022

Brendan Power is Born-Digital Archive Preservation Librarian at Trinity College Library Dublin.


iPres 2022 was my first in-person attendance at the conference. My first role in digital preservation began a couple of months before the outbreak of COVID-19 so it was great to meet and interact with colleagues at an in-person event. The first thing that struck me when reflecting on iPres 2022 was that being an in-person event really helped to make manifest that community is really at the heart of what iPres and the Digital Preservation Coalition does.


The atmosphere at iPres was welcoming, friendly, supportive. The delegates I interacted with were generous with their time and knowledge and so willing to share their experiences with others. It was clear that as a community there was an acknowledgement that everyone is at different stages of their digital preservation journey. Those further along the journey were open to sharing their experiences, honest about the challenges they faced, and generous with offering their learnings. The attendees I met also highlighted to me that digital preservation is a global concern that impacts upon any industry or sector you can think of. I met delegates from national libraries and archives, universities, businesses, banks, charities, government departments and agencies, and many more. We all face the same challenges, and it was heartening to be surrounded by so many like-minded people working towards a common aim.

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