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Preserving digital only materials
- To: liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
- Subject: Preserving digital only materials
- From: jfurrh@hsc.unt.edu
- Date: Fri, 27 Feb 2009 19:31:01 EST
- Reply-to: liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
- Sender: owner-liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
Librarians are thinking of ways of preserving digital only material, including legal blogs. The National Digital Information Infrastructure and Preservation Program, coordinated by the Library of Congress and operated by over 130 partners across the nation, has the mission to develop a national strategy to collect, archive and preserve the burgeoning amounts of digital content, especially materials that are created only in digital formats, for current and future generations. This is an on-going project that is attempting to archive internet webpages. Of course with any project of massive proportions there are bound to be logistical questions about sustaining web formats over the long term. This group is attempting to answer those questions and save important intellectual discussion delivered over the web. Please see their homepage: http://www.digitalpreservation.gov/ Jamie Furrh Digital Projects Librarian >>> Sandy Thatcher <sgt3@psu.edu> 2/25/2009 7:57 PM >>> This makes eminently good sense inasmuch as (1) articles published in law journals are not peer reviewed (but simply accepted or rejected by the student editors who manage the journals) and hence law journals avoid the expense of managing a peer-review system and (2), if I am not mistaken, whatever copyediting is done is done by students also, serving as unpaid laborers (but gaining some academic benefits from doing so). In fact, this is so obviously a Good Thing, one wonders why it wasn't done years ago. Need it always take a recession for people to examine what needless costs are built into the system? Let's hear it for all the trees saved! P.S. One hears that some of the most authoritative and important new legal publishing in short form is now being done by leading scholars through blogs. Are librarians thinking about ways of preserving this elusive literature? Sandy Thatcher Penn State University Press
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