Short Paper: Do We Really Know Our Data? Toward a Methodology for Assessing Preservation Sustainability and Improving PAIMAS Negotiations via Characterization

Abstract

Library and Archives Canada’s (LAC) new File Formats Policy, which constitutes a from-scratch analysis of the Preservation area’s migration capacity, has been converted into a database that can be remotely queried. In tandem with DROID, we developed a new software tool that compares a target dataset (e.g., material for acquisition, or material being migrated to a new media) against our PRONOM-based Local Digital Format Registry (LDFR) database. The tool then outputs a report – which then speaks to LAC’s capacity to manage the target data – and flags detectable file format and data management issues. The tool is a major development for LAC and enables us to assess file format compliance, preservation tenability, and therefore the estimated cost of ownership at the pre-transfer stage of the lifecycle – which will inform PAIMAS-oriented discussions with internal and external clients – leading to better overall capacity management, and digital preservation migration, planning, and sustainability.

Details

Creators
Tom Smyth
Institutions
Library And Archives Canada
Date
Keywords
characterization; migration; sustainability; capacity; paimas
Publication Type
short paper
License
CC-BY 4.0 International
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