World Digital Preservation Day Events
Institutions all over the world are organizing events on Thursday 7 November 2024 in honour of World Digital Preservation Day. Scroll down to see if there are any events in your region to join! If you would like your event listed here as well, please submit details to angela.puggioni@dpconline.org.
Lunch québécoise – Préservation numérique
La communauté de pratique québécoise sur la préservation numérique vous invite à un débat sur le format PDF! En ce 7 novembre 2024, saurons-nous vous convaincre des vertus ou des défauts de ce format présent dans tous les fonds d’archives et toutes les collections?
Date : 7 novembre 2024
Heure : 12h à 12h45 (GMT-5)
Preserving the IAEA’s Digital Content, Celebrating IAEA Contributions
On the occasion of World Digital Preservation Day, the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) staff are invited to join an online event organised by MTGS-ARMS to explore the value, challenges and future of digital preservation. A panel of staff involved in digital preservation, together with guest speaker Jeffrey van der Hoeven (Digital Preservation Expert from the National Library of the Netherlands, Chair of the International Internet Preservation Consortium and Director of the Open Preservation Foundation), will discuss the significance of digital preservation for the IAEA. They will highlight existing efforts to preserve the Agency’s digital legacy for as long as necessary, preserving it beyond the limits of technological and organisational change. Bringing together diverse perspectives, the event will provide insight into historical preservation efforts and losses, how AI can simplify and improve work processes, the importance of preserving scientific data, the use of persistent identifiers (DOI), the required technical infrastructure and current trends in digital preservation. There will also be an opportunity to ask questions to the panellists.
El Impacto de la Preservación Digital en la Huella de Carbono
7 de Noviembre de 2024, 15:00 UTC
Como parte de una serie de webinarios de RIPDASA, en esta sesión para el Día Mundial de la Preservación Digital, Sarah Middleton de la DPC ofrece una descripción general del desarrollo y los recursos resultantes sobre el tema de la preservación digital y el medio ambiente.
Cinemateca de Bogotá WDPD2024 Eventos
En el marco del Día Mundial de la Preservación Digital WDPD 2024, el jueves 7 de noviembre, la Cinemateca de Bogotá celebrará la existencia de las comunidades que rodean y apoyan la implementación de buenas prácticas en el contexto de la preservación del patrimonio cultural digital. Para ello, se realizará una conferencia on line, convocando a la ciudadanía en general y a archivistas digitales vinculados a bibliotecas, archivos y museos de Latinoamérica y a profesionales de la preservación digital, así como a artistas audiovisuales, cineastas, profesionales de la comunicación y las artes audiovisuales.
Entre el 13 y 28 de noviembre se desarrollará el Tercer Laboratorio de Preservación Digital, un espacio que nació en 2019 con el objetivo de pensar, dialogar, problematizar y definir soluciones transdisciplinares aplicadas a la preservación digital en el contexto audiovisual y de las artes audiovisuales contemporáneas. Este tercer laboratorio busca poner en diálogo las disciplinas del patrimonio cultural digital en los contextos de los museos, bibliotecas y archivos, para abordar las diferentes problemáticas de la conservación, preservación, restauración y representación de obras "complejas" o basadas en la temporalidad. Este laboratorio contará con la orientación de Jo Ana Morfin y Dave Rice.
Penn State University Libraries World Digital Preservation Day Event
Celebrate World Digital Preservation Day 2024 with Penn State University Libraries! Our sessions this year feature a webinar on "File Fixity in the Cloud" by Kyle Rimkus from the University of Illinois, followed by an open session called "Fail Tales" to share and reflect on digital preservation challenges. Both events are virtual and free to attend. For the full schedule and to register, please see the link below!
Digital Archiving Surgery at the National Records of Scotland
The National Records of Scotland are holding a Digital Archiving Surgery for Public Record (Scotland) Act stakeholders on World Digital Preservation Day. Attendance is by invitation only. Element 7 of the Keeper’s Model Plan relates to the archiving of public records. The Act specifically requires a Records Management Plan to make provision about the archiving and destruction, or other disposal, of an authority’s public records. Authorities must have arrangements in place to ensure records that have enduring value are permanently retained and made accessible in accordance with the Keeper’s ‘Supplementary Guidance on Proper Arrangements for Archiving Public Documents’. Since the Act came into force in 2013 there has been a significant increase in born-digital public records, with a growing number of authorities now solely creating and managing digital records. There is also an increasing move towards the digitisation of paper records (scan to digital projects).
Digital Repository of Ireland Coffee Morning and Strategic Plan Launch
November’s monthly coffee morning will take place on Thursday 7 November from 10.00-11.00am. All are welcome to attend this in-person event, held at the Royal Irish Academy, to celebrate World Digital Preservation Day 2024! At this event, we will highlight our digital preservation achievements over the year, and launch the DRI’s first organisational Strategic Plan! Please RSVP for this event so we can provide tea, coffee and treats.
World Digital Preservation Day PRONOM Hackathon
Back by popular demand, the PRONOM team will be running their yearly hackathon, PRONOM Research Week 2024, to mark World Digital Preservation Day. This year the hackathon will be the 7th November-15th November. This is a week long excuse to delve into the world of file formats alongside other digital preservation practitioners. Have a file format you can't identify in your repository? This week could be the time to investigate with help from others around the globe. We will be kicking off the week with a PRONOM Open Drop-In session on the 7th dedicated to answering your questions.
FIND OUT MORE
Preserving NYC's Digital Content: Celebrating Our Communities
Join the NYC Department of Records and Information Services’ Municipal Archives on November 4th for a virtual discussion! Digital archivists Caleb Simone and Kelli O'Toole will explore the vital role of archives in safeguarding cultural heritage and ensuring accessibility for future generations. Attendees will learn about the recent migration of the City's archives to Preservica, ongoing data remediation efforts, and how diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) practices are being integrated into digital preservation. Don't miss this opportunity to celebrate the digital content that reflects NYC's vibrant communities.
FIND OUT MORE
Celebrating the Launch of the New Frameworks Project
The Brown University Library's Center for Digital Scholarship is hosting an event in honor of World Preservation Day, celebrating the launch of one of their projects that is devoted to the preservation of very difficult to preserve born-computational and born-digital art. The New Frameworks to Preserve and Publish Born-Computational Art project is a two-year project funded by the National Endowment for the Arts that developed new approaches for the long-term preservation and presentation of innovative, experimental works in the digital literary arts space that did not have any other models for preservation prior to the project. Join in-person or virtually to celebrate the launch of the project, hear about the models they developed in collaboration with the selected artists, and meet the project team!
FIND OUT MORE
Celebrating Indigenous Communities engaged with digital preservation
For WDPD this year DPC Australasia and Asia-Pacific will be holding an online celebration of three groups working with Indigenous communities from our region who were winners or finalists in the 2024 Digital Preservation Awards (DPA). The session will show video presentations made by the three local DPA finalists and will be followed by a live online discussion with representatives from each group to find out more about their projects, why they are important for these communities and what they are planning next.
Streamlining Digital Preservation and PII Security Through Libsafe Advanced
In this webinar, LIBNOVA will explore how their 'Libsafe Advanced' solution can help institutions optimize digital preservation and enhance the security of files containing PII. Discover how this platform enables efficient long-term data management, providing protection for both files and privacy.
Einblicke in das Historische Archiv der Europäischen Union
Das diesjährige WDPD-Thema ist für das LVR-Archivberatungs- und Fortbildungszentrum (LVR-AFZ) Ansporn, den Blick über den Tellerrand der regionalen Gemeinschaften hinaus auf die europäische Ebene zu richten. Wie funktioniert eigentlich das Archiv der Europäischen Union? Wie begegnet es den Herausforderungen der unterschiedlichen Archivtraditionen der Mitgliedsstaaten und welche Lösungen gibt es für die digitale Archivierung? Der Direktor des Historischen Archivs der Europäischen Union am Europäischen Hochschulinstitut in Florenz, Dr. Dieter Schlenker, wird in seinem Vortrag sein Institut vorstellen und den Teilnehmern einen Einblick in die digitale Strategie seiner Institution geben.
Vassar Libraries is preserving our digital community
Come celebrate World Digital Preservation Day with Vassar College Libraries! This year's theme is "Preserving Our Digital Content: Celebrating Communities." This nostalgic event will bring you back to the days of your first phone with our display of retro communication tech. Was it a brick? Did its keyboard slide out? Or was it one of the first smartphones? Learn about how Vassar Libraries is preserving our digital community while enjoying Wii games, crafts, and candy in the Main Library lobby from 3-6 pm. If you happen to have that old phone, or other small tech, catching dust stop by to drop it off for recycling!
Date: November 7, 2024
Start: 3:00PM
End: 6:00PM
Location: Vassar College Main Library Lobby
Jisc Webinar
As part of the World Digital Preservation day celebrations, Jisc is offering a free webinar to introduce you to Jisc’s Digital Preservation advice, guidance and consultancy offer. This session will be useful for those involved (or interested in being involved) in keeping data usable at their institution—at any level of maturity in this space—including:
-
Library management/services
-
Learning management/services
-
Research information management/services
-
Records management/services
-
Archives
-
Open research management/services
-
Scholarly comms and scholarly pubs management/services
-
Digital preservation management/services
-
IT and cyber teams
Webinar on Oral Histories and Digital Preservation
On WDPD2024, the Academic Preservation Trust (APTrust) is presenting a special webinar on the preservation of oral histories, an invaluable yet often underrepresented part of our archival heritage. Experts Michael Runyon (William & Mary) and Rachel Jacobson (Georgetown University) will discuss how their respective institutions digitally preserve oral histories, whether they be born-digital or from analog media. They will delve into some common issues around preserving and making oral histories accessible. They hope to generate a discussion about best practices in the description and preservation of this important aspect of public history.
Panel: "Every Day is Digital Preservation Day:
Demystifying UNT Libraries' Digital Preservation Policy Framework"
The University of North Texas Libraries will host a discussion panel on November 7th (2-3pm CDT) showcasing one of their own digital preservation activities: the UNT Libraries' Digital Preservation Policy Framework. Panelists Drs. Mark Phillips, Ana Krahmer, and Daniel Alemneh examine the current status of digital preservation. They'll dive into real-world case studies that reveal how Digital Preservation Policy adoption enhances access, preservation, and overall operational efficiencies.
We are Amused: Victorian Humour and the Digital
International Conference, University of Caen, Normandie, 7th and 8th November 2024
Confirmed Keynote Speakers: Dr Bob Nicholson (Edge Hill University) on the Transnational Press and Professor James Mussell (Leeds) on Seriality and Sustainability.
The event addresses how digital projects can bring communities of scholars together to collaborate and contribute to research sites in order to ensure a continued communication, development and enhancement of the resource.
Join the Dutch Digital Heritage Network on WDPD2024 with the 'tools on tour'
This year, the Dutch Digital Heritage Network are highlighting the preservation tools for policy, certification, pre-ingest, education, monitoring etc. helping us to preserve our rich heritage legacy. And to celebrate this as one community, we come together in the beautiful town of Utrecht. Some of the expected highlights: the Home Computer Museum brings their mobile digital scan station to unlock your floppy disks and there will be demonstrations of viPER, Bits and Bots and the digital heritage evaluation tool. Our annual digital preservation cookies (the edible ones) will be served as well. So whether you are a veteran in digital preservation or just starting out: please feel free to join us.
Recreating the Buzz of a Retro Office Environment
November 7, 12-2 pm at the Bodleian Libraries, Oxford, UK
What better way to mark #WDPD2024 than by dusting off our collection of obsolete workplace tech and recreating the buzz of a retro office environment? Join us as we recreate the sights and sounds of a time when beeping pagers, whirring fax machines, and buzzing dot matrix printers were the hallmark signs of a productive day.
What to Expect:
-
Exhibition of old office tech
-
MS Paint and ASCII art activities
-
And of course, Coffee and Cake!
Audience: Oxford University staff
No need to book - just drop in and enjoy a break from the modern office!
WDPD 2024 Webinar at the National Archives of Malaysia
The National Archives of Malaysia are organizing a full day of virtual presentations to mark World Digital Preservation Day. Speakers include (amongst others) Muhammad Idzwan bin Ramli of the National Archives of Malaysia, Robin Wright and Paul Wheatley of the Digital Preservation Coalition. More information will follow soon.
WDPD 2024 with the Brazilian Network of Digital Preservation Services Cariniana
Rede Cariniana team will be celebrating World Digital Preservation Day with a series of activities, all of which will be published on the Network's YouTube Channel.
The Brazilian Network of Digital Preservation Services Cariniana collaborates with external partners to provide its members with tools and services. Works with the broader community to align its efforts with emerging national and international efforts. It also provides training and support for preservation platforms and services, seeking to integrate platforms and new service offerings. This year, our celebration focuses on a few thems that will be discussed by our researcher's groups: Risk planning for digital collections and early digital Preservation, Digital Preservation Metadata Applications, Impacts of AI and Impacts of Blockchain on Digital Preservation, Considerations on the applicability of digital preservation policies, Digital preservation outside libraries, archives and museums and digital preservation manuals, guides and tutorials.
Media Types
The following Bit List entries represent media types; where the the risk is caused or aggravated because of the media used:
Engaging with Public Policy
The DPC campaigns for digital preservation and long term access to be a feature of public policy and routinely advises Government and related agencies on issues that are relevant to our members and our mandate.
The DPC Board has adopted a set of principles for the DPC's engagement with public policy and direct advocacy. While this document is due for renewal, it lays out in clear terms the values of the Coalition and how and when the DPC will intervene in public policy matters. Download the full policy [PDF 332KB].
Our responses are published as a commentary of public policy consultations relating to digital preservation:
-
Scottish Government Finance and Public Administration Committee Budget Scrutiny 2024 - 2025 consultation on funding for culture submitted 18 August 2023
-
Australian National Cultural Policy Submission submitted 22 August 2022
-
Response to Call for Evidence: Impact of Covid-19 on DCMS sectors, submitted 19th June 2020
-
DPC Response to Public Data Corporation and Open Data Consultation, 11 November 2011: DPC has responded to two connected consultations from the Cabinet Office on proposals for the Data Policy for a proposed Public Data Corporation and for the UK government's Open Data Policy. The DPC believes that open data should be planned for the long-term otherwise the opportunities that it creates will be unsustainable and underdeveloped. Four practical implications follow from this principle: open data needs to be signposted predictably so that links and references to data are resilient; open data needs to be robust in terms of format, media and description to avoid the inadvertent disruptions caused by obsolescence and media failure; changes to open data need to be tracked and published to ensure that the integrity and authenticity is not lost; open data needs to be predictable in form enabling comparison of performance through time and facilitating the creation and refinement of analytical tools.
- See the original consultation on Making Open Data Real
- See DPC Response to the Making Open Data Real consultation
- See the original consultation on Data Policy for a Public Data Corporation
- See DPC Response to Public Data Corporation consultation
-
DPC Response to EU Science Information Policy Consultation, 08 September 2011: The DPC has responded to a consultation from the EC regarding science information policy, noting that the impacts sought from improved access to scientific information are only viable where sufficient attention is paid to preservation. Preservation has a particular importance for scientific information because meaningful innovation is necessarily responsive previous generations of research. In that sense, preservation of appropriate research outputs is essential to all sciences, especially for unrepeatable experiments or unique moments of discovery. Aspirations about access to information are meaningless without commensurate actions that to ensure preservation. We welcome all actions that will encourage a dialogue between and within member states to ensure the preservation of scientific information and we call on the EU to engage in that dialogue as a matter of urgency, using existing examples of best practice to help build capacity.
- The original consultation from the EC
- See the full text of the DPC response
-
DPC Response to Second Consultation on Legal Deposit, December 2010: The DPC has responded to the second phase of consultation on Electronic Legal Deposit noting the essential relationship between preservation and access. We note and welcome the proposal that extend legal deposit to include charged content as well as content to which access is restricted. This will create the conditions where a more rounded and more valuable national archive can be created. Experience in digital preservation shows that normalization and adherence to standards in the creation of digital resources are advantageous to long term access. Therefore we have some questions pertaining to the practicality of provisions regarding deposit of materials, in particular those regulations that leave the medium and quality of electronic deposits at the discretion of publishers, and those regulations that pertain to adapting content for preservation. If poorly implemented, these provisions could have the inadvertent result of making preservation intractable or excessively complicated. We recognise that recommendations from the DPC are best focussed on those topics where we can offer specialist commentary. Therefore it is not our intention to provide a detailed scrutiny of each element of these regulations. However it is our view that preservation is only sensible within the context of access, and that preservation should be configured around the impact that comes with access. Therefore we have commented on a small number of access issues that we believe have a bearing on the case for preservation. In January 2010 the Department for Culture Media and Sport (DCMS) consulted on draft regulations for the legal deposit of ‘free of charge’ electronic publications – the ‘free web’. This consultation was intended to be the first part of a two part process and the DPC responded arguing inter alia that the second phase of proposals be presented without delay as arguably the ‘paid web’ includes material of lasting value and that until regulations were introduced this element of our collected digital memory would be at risk. In September DCMS published a paper for the second phase of the consultation process. The regulations discussed this time apply to a much broader range of material including publications for which there is a charge, publications which are subject to access restrictions and material compiled by queries from databases. It excludes sound and film recordings and unpublished material.
-
DPC Response to Public Records Review, 30 July 2010: The DPC has responded to the consultation on the Public records review, welcoming the explicit statement that digitized and ‘born digital’ materials constitute a public record, noting and supporting the focus on informational content and the consequent need for ‘technology proofing’ and the management of formats. The DPC has offered its assistance in identifying and resolving issues that may arise. Research shows that clear advice about the preservation of digital materials is both in high demand and can be difficult to procure, so we note the new role for the Keeper of the Public Record to advise and inspect archives. The DPC has offered its help in two ways: to assist the Keeper in the production of specialist advice notes; and to support the Keeper in the wider dissemination of advice to a diverse audience that is hungry for solutions. 'This represents an opportunity to build capacity for digital preservation in a diverse range of authorities' explained William Kilbride, Executive Director of the DPC.
-
DPC Response to Review of Exceptions, 31 March 2010: The DPC has published its response to the recent Intellectual Property Office consultation on exceptions to copyright law with a detailed discussion of how these proposals impact on digital preservation. In summary, the DPC warmly welcomes the proposal to permit multiple copies to be created for preservation purposes. It notes and welcomes the proposal to broaden the types of content that can qualify for this exception and welcomes the proposal that extends this exception to a wider range of institutions. The DPC seeks a number of clarifications to ensure that perfectly reasonable preservation actions are not inadvertently inhibited. For example the Coalition want to ensure that institutions are not prevented from collaborative preservation and is concerned that attempting to restrict preservation copying to an institution’s permanent collection may interfere with perfectly laudable and reasonable rescue and appraisal efforts.
- The original consultation is online here from the Intellectual Property Office.
- See the full text of our response here . [PDF 430KB]
-
DPC Response to First Consultation on Legal Deposit, March 2010: The DPC has published its response to the recent consultation from the Department for Culture Media and Sport on 'UK Online Publications'. The DPC has welcomed the progress which has been made by the Legal Deposit Advisory Panel on recommendations for collecting digital material and is eager that the momentum recently achieved is maintained so that continuing progress can be made. It warmly welcomes the proposal for regulation-based harvesting and calls for early implementation of this proposal, offering the assistance of the DPC in capacity building for staff and tools which this will necessitate. There is a range of opinions within the DPC's membership regarding the access provisions within the Proposals. The position of the DPC itself, however, remains clear that future access to the harvested materials at any level will be impossible without the safeguards that rigorous attention to preservation provides.
-
DPC Responds to Archives for the 21st Century, 15 December 2009: The DPC has welcomed a new government consultation by arguing that 'the challenge of managing digital information is one that the UK is well placed to address'. On the 6th May 2009 the National Archives, on behalf of the Department for Communities and Local Government, Department for Culture Media and Sport and the Ministry of Justice, released a consultation on the future of archival services in the UK. It calls for better and fewer archives; better leadership and training in the archives sector; better electronic access to and wider participation in archives; and greater attention to the challenges of digital data. The DPC Response to the report concentrates on the latter of these issues. It offers support to the project team in meeting the challenge of digital data and it provides examples of the ways in which DPC members have already ensured that the UK is uniquely well placed to face the challenge of digital data.
-
National Heritage Science Strategy Consultation, December 2009: The House of Lords Science and Technology Committee inquiry on Science and Heritage called for the production of a new National Heritage Science Strategy, a task that is now being taken forward by the National Heritage Science Strategy Steering Group. Work has progressed in four packages: at the time of writing 3 reports have been released for consultation and a fourth document - the strategy iteslf is in development. The DPC has responded to this consultation observing that digital resources constitute a heritage which is worthy of preservation, and that developments in heritage science in relation to digital heritage will be better served where they are aligned with existing and forthcoming initiatives.
- Reports from the National Heritage Science Strategy [external]
- The role of science in the management of the UK's heritage: A response from the Digital Preservation Coalition [pdf]
- The use of science to enhance our understanding of the past: A response from the Digital Preservation Coalition [pdf]
- Understanding Capacity in the Heritage Science Sector: A response from the Digital Preservation Coalition [pdf]
-
DPC welcomes Digital Britain Interim Report and calls for greater clarity and consideration of digital legacy, especially where this pertains to content, March 2009
Subcategories
Bit List
The DPC's 'Bit List' of Digitally Endangered Species is a crowd-sourcing exercise to discover which digital materials our community thinks are most at risk, as well as those which are relatively safe thanks to digital preservation. By compiling and maintaining this list over the coming years, the DPC aims to celebrate great digital preservation endeavors as entries become less of a ‘concern,’ whilst still highlighting the need for efforts to safeguard those still considered ‘critically endangered.’