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Latest Update: 8 August 2007

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Digital Preservation Initiatives

The identification of those properties which are significant to the continued preservation and accessibility of authentic digital objects, across changing technical environments, is a fundamental task for successful digital preservation. Unless such properties can be defined in a rigorous and measurable manner, cultural memory institutions have no objective framework for identifying, implementing, and validating appropriate preservation strategies, nor for asserting the continued authenticity of their digital collections.

In recent years, the need to identify such properties has been highlighted within a number of notable digital preservation programmes. These include the National Archives of Australia, the Electronic Record Archives programme at the National Archives and Records Administration, The National Archives’ Seamless Flow programme in the UK, and the EU-funded DELOS project. Some conceptual work on authenticity and object properties has been undertake as part of the InterPARES 2 project at the University of British Columbia. However, to date, little research has been undertaken on the practical application of the concept and approach. It is therefore widely recognised that there is a pressing need for practical research in this area, to develop a methodology, and begin identifying quantifiable sets of significant properties for specific classes of digital object.