Is someone who has a role to assess the content to be preserved. Content specialists conduct an analysis to determine whether the collection is worthy of long-term preservation with the stages of selection, appraisal, management, and digital curation.
Published in Chapter:
Digital Preservation: Technical Aspects and Frameworks for Librarians
Cahyo Trianggoro (National Research and Innovation Agency, Indonesia) and Abdurrakhman Prasetyadi (National Research and Innovation Agency, Indonesia)
Copyright: © 2022
|Pages: 17
DOI: 10.4018/978-1-7998-9094-2.ch023
Abstract
In recent decades, libraries, archives, and museums have created digital collections that comprise millions of objects to provide long-term access to them. One of the core preservation activities deals with the evaluation of appropriate formats used for encoding digital content. The development of science has entered the 4th paradigm, where data has become much more intensive than in the previous period. This situation raises new challenges in managing research data, especially related to data preservation in digital format, which allows research data to be utilized for the long term. The development of science in the 4th paradigm allows researchers to collaborate with and reuse research datasets produced by a research group. To take advantage of each other's data, there is a principle that must be understood together, namely the FAIR principle, an acronym for findable, accessible, interoperable, and reusable.