digital preservation through cooperation: lockss

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Digital Preservation through Cooperation: LOCKSS Gail McMillan Digital Library and Archives, University Libraries Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University VIVA Steering Committee and SCHEV LAC Virginia State University June 10, 2005

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Digital Preservation through Cooperation: LOCKSS. Gail McMillan Digital Library and Archives, University Libraries Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University VIVA Steering Committee and SCHEV LAC Virginia State University June 10, 2005. Libraries: Collections, not just Links. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Digital Preservation through Cooperation: LOCKSS

Digital Preservation through Cooperation: LOCKSS

Gail McMillanDigital Library and Archives, University Libraries

Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University

VIVA Steering Committee and SCHEV LACVirginia State University

June 10, 2005

Page 2: Digital Preservation through Cooperation: LOCKSS

Libraries: Collections, not just Links

• Libraries should own, as well as manage, their digital collections, including– Content currently leased: VIVA examples

• BioOne, Cambridge Uni. Press, Nature Publishing Group, Project Muse • See http://lockss.stanford.edu/about/titles.htm

– LOCKSS prevents the publisher from revoking access rights to back content

– Open-access web resources, for example• Abbey's Web: Provides links to biographical information,

bibliographies, articles, and other resources about the environmental writer, Edward Abbey: http://www.abbeyweb.net/

Page 3: Digital Preservation through Cooperation: LOCKSS

LOCKSS BasicsLibrary uses inexpensive computer and free software

• Programmatically collects content from publisher

• Preserves content among LOCKSS servers – Periodically audits content and repairs as needed from other

LOCKSS servers

• Disseminates content to library’s appropriate users– Host library’s readers see the content from publisher’s URL

– Unless it isn’t available from there • It is delivered from the reader’s library’s LOCKSS-preserved content.

• It doesn’t look any different.

Page 4: Digital Preservation through Cooperation: LOCKSS

LOCKSS and EJournals

• Library (consortium) negotiates with publishers• Publishers trust LOCKSS

– Collections begin with subscriptions, not retrospectively– Libraries have access to their collections in perpetuity– Outside the appropriate user community, access only to audit and

repair files

• Low cost to administer and run– Less than 1 hour per month– 95% of systems patched in 48hrs

• Low storage costs: 2003: $0.70 = one year, one journal, ~0.5GB

Page 5: Digital Preservation through Cooperation: LOCKSS

600MHz-128MB RAM-Bootable CD drive-Floppy disk drive

One PC holds >3,000 years of an average electronic journal (2005)

LOCKSS software turns a PC into a preservation tool

Page 6: Digital Preservation through Cooperation: LOCKSS

LOCKSS and Publishers

• Suggested license language permits libraries to– Collect and preserve currently accessible materials, i.e., subscription-based content– Use materials consistent with original license terms– Provide copies to others for purposes of audit and repair

Review of Writing and Photography of Appalachia

Page 7: Digital Preservation through Cooperation: LOCKSS

LOCKSS is for more than just ejournals

• MetaArchive of Southern Digital Culture • ETDs: Electronic Theses and Dissertations

– ASERL: Association of SouthEastern Research Libraries

• 9/11 web sites -- NYPL• Newspapers -- University of Utah• Government Documents

Page 8: Digital Preservation through Cooperation: LOCKSS

NDIIPP National Digital Information Infrastructure and

Preservation Program

• Created by federal legislation in December 2000• Support preservation of significant “born-digital”

content at risk• Three areas of focus

– Network of preservation partners: Clear instructions from legislators that LC should work with others

– Architectural framework for preservation– Digital preservation research

Page 9: Digital Preservation through Cooperation: LOCKSS

Key Features of a Secure MetaArchive

1. Distributed preservation strategy2. Flexible organizational model3. Formal content selection process 4. Capability for migrating archives5. Dim archiving strategy6. Low cost to deployment7. Self-Sustaining incentives 8. Simple preservation exchange mechanisms with

the Library of Congress

Page 10: Digital Preservation through Cooperation: LOCKSS

MetaArchive Project Goals

1. Create a conspectus of digital content within the subject domain held by the partner sites

2. Harvested body of the most critical content to be preserved (3 terabytes, w/ capability to expand)

3. Develop a model cooperative agreement for ongoing collaboration and sustainability

4. Distributed preservation network infrastructure based on the LOCKSS software

Page 11: Digital Preservation through Cooperation: LOCKSS

MetaArchive’s CLOCKSS (Collecting Lots of Copies Keeps Stuff Safe)

• Diversifying LOCKSS– Software , hardware, collections, communities

• Study problems– Dynamic content– Format migration (next grant)

• Cooperative agreement model– Not only an effective preservation network for

one body of digital content, but enable the creation of many others for this important purpose.

Page 12: Digital Preservation through Cooperation: LOCKSS

http://www.lockss.org