eprintid: 1677 rev_number: 6 eprint_status: archive userid: 5 dir: disk0/00/00/16/77 datestamp: 2017-06-26 10:12:48 lastmod: 2017-06-26 10:12:48 status_changed: 2017-06-26 10:12:48 type: conference_item metadata_visibility: show item_issues_id: no_subjects_assigned item_issues_type: no_subjects_assigned item_issues_description: No subject has been assigned to this eprint. item_issues_timestamp: 2017-06-27 04:15:21 item_issues_status: discovered item_issues_count: 1 creators_name: Ruusalepp, Raivo creators_affiliation: National Library of Estonia, Tallinn creators_country: EE creators_id: Raivo.Ruusalepp@nlib.ee title: Preserving digital legal deposit - new challenges and opportunities divisions: div2_1pr full_text_status: public pres_type: paper keywords: Digital legal deposit, preservation of born digital content, resilience abstract: Born digital content has always been considered to be a bigger challenge for preservation than digitised content. Higher volume and technical complexity, dynamism as well as a complex surrounding rights space are frequently cited as aspects that make born digital content ‘special’ to memory institutions. This paper builds on the Estonian case of introducing digital legal deposit which has led to an exercise of reconceptualising the digital preservation function of the national library. The rapid increase in volume, file size and new file formats have led to making the library’s preservation service levels explicit, an update to the preservation policy and automation of archiving workflows. The new demands on preservation are pushing the current digital repository system of the national library to its limits and the library needs to embark on migrating to a new preservation solution. This response to a sudden change in digital preservation workload is typical in the heritage sector – upgrading the ingest component is the first instinctive reaction of most memory institutions. This paper proposes that increasing the throughput of ingest component needs to be combined with a modular concept of a preservation system that sets interoperability as its core principle. When digital preservation is conceptualised as an exercise of resilience rather than sustainability, the interoperability requirement for systems architecture and service design follows logically. event_type: conference event_venue: Centennial Hall related_url_url: http://2017.ifla.org/ related_url_type: congress referencetext: Bide, M., Potter, L., Watkinson, A. (1999). Digital preservation - An introduction to the standards issues surrounding the deposit of non-print publications. British Library and Information Commission Research Report 23. Retrieved from www.bic.org.uk/files/pdfs/digpres.pdf Dooley, J.M., Luce, K. (2010). Taking our pulse: The OCLC Research survey of special collections and archives. Dublin, Ohio: OCLC Research. Retrieved from http://www.oclc.org/research/publications/library/2010/2010-11.pdf Estonian Legal Deposit Copy Act. (2016). Retrieved from https://www.riigiteataja.ee/en/eli/514092016001/consolide ISO 14721:2012 Space data and information transfer systems – Open archival information system (OAIS) – Reference model Kilbride, W. (2017). Obsolescence 2.0 Digital Preservation by people, for people. Retrieved from http://dpconline.org/blog/obsolescence-2-0-digital-preservation-by-people-for-people National Digital Stewardship Alliance. (2013). Levels of Digital Preservation. Retrieved from http://ndsa.org/activities/levels-of-digital-preservation/ Neal, J.G. (2015). Preserving the Born-Digital Record. Many more questions than answers. Retrieved from https://americanlibrariesmagazine.org/2015/05/28/preserving-the-born-digital-record/ Preforma. (2017). Open source portal: veraPDF, DPF Manager, Mediaconch. Retrieved from http://preforma-project.eu/open-source-portal.html conferences: 2017 document_types: congr_paper withdrawn: FALSE session_title: Preservation and Conservation (PAC) Strategic Programme session_id: 811 citation: RUUSALEPP, Raivo (2017) Preserving digital legal deposit - new challenges and opportunities. Paper presented at: IFLA WLIC 2017 – Wrocław, Poland – Libraries. Solidarity. Society. in Session 210 - Preservation and Conservation (PAC) Strategic Programme. document_url: http://library.ifla.org/1677/1/210-ruusalepp-en.pdf