UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. — Digital preservation is a term that might sound simple enough — but in an academic research library environment it means a lot more than just saving backup copies of files. It is a complex, ongoing process requiring meticulous, large-scale planning to ensure that digitized and born-digital scholarly content is curated and maintained across technology’s changes over time so that it remains useful. Penn State University Libraries’ digital preservation policy attempts to ensure future generations’ access to that digital content.
“The digital preservation policy is a milestone achievement for the University Libraries and is its biggest public commitment to the ongoing curation of digital content collected by the Libraries. As the digital shift continues, the significance of this policy will increase,” said Nathan Tallman, digital preservation librarian. “It's the first public statement of its kind for the Libraries and Penn State. It demonstrates a full-circle investment in the digital content lifecycle and will safeguard future investment in collection materials.”
Penn State’s policy — the most recent among 10 other Big Ten Academic Alliance member libraries who established similar policies during the past decade — is significant for University researchers because many grant-funding organizations now ask for proof of a preservation policy in grant applications. The Libraries’ leaders have further supported the policy with the adoption of storage infrastructure and permanent funding specifically for digital preservation and a detailed procedural roadmap for current and future employees to follow.
The roadmap component of the digital preservation policy includes a detailed set of Levels of Digital Preservation Commitment-Based on an appraisal process, as digital objects are then selected and assigned degrees to which they will be maintained over time. Each level — Level 0: No Action, Level 1: Bit-level Preservation, Level 2: Logical Preservation and Level 3: Object Preservation — has a corresponding set of activities assigned to it.