By
Richard Thurston
Monday, December 18 2006 10:40 AM
URL:
http://www.zdnetasia.com/news/business/0,39044229,61975904,00.htm
The European Union is funding a project involving national libraries and
digital preservation groups aimed at fighting off a looming "digital black
hole."
The black hole in question is the potential future loss of data as file
formats become obsolete and inaccessible.
The Planets consortium will
develop a "sustainable framework" to maintain
access to digital content after its original storage format has disappeared.
("Planets" is short for "preservation and long-term access project through networked services.)
It is estimated that 5 billion documents are produced every year within the
EU, of which 2 percent--100 million--are seen as worth archiving. Two million of
these documents are on formats at risk from disappearing into the digital black
hole.
The consortium includes national libraries, archives, research institutes and
technology specialists across Europe. The organizations taking part include the
British Library; Microsoft Research in Cambridge, England; IBM Netherlands; the
Austrian National Library; the Swiss Federal Archives; and Freiburg and Cologne
universities in Germany.
The EU's Information Society Technologies R&D program is providing 8.6
million euros (US$11.3 million) of the 14 million euros (US$18.5 million) required
to fund the project.
Adam Farquhar, head of e-architecture at the British Library, said that as
computer hardware and software become obsolete, digital
information reliant on this technology becomes increasingly hard to find, view, search and reuse.
"There is a growing consensus on the need to act now to avoid a gaping hole
in our cultural and scientific record," he said.
Lynne Brindley, chief executive of the British Library, said European libraries and archives are
uniquely positioned to lead this digital-preservation initiative, as they have the legal responsibility and the legislative framework
to safeguard digital information.
Tim Ferguson of Silicon.com reported from London.