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David Fritsch Assistant Director, Library Relations Portico

Helping Librarians Make a Secure Transition to e-Resources: Understanding Portico COLD Central Michigan University September 25, 2008. David Fritsch Assistant Director, Library Relations Portico. Libraries Moving Steadily to e-Only: factors driving the transition.

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David Fritsch Assistant Director, Library Relations Portico

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  1. Helping Librarians Make a Secure Transition to e-Resources:Understanding PorticoCOLDCentral Michigan UniversitySeptember 25, 2008 David FritschAssistant Director, Library RelationsPortico

  2. Libraries Moving Steadily to e-Only:factors driving the transition • Improved discoverability and remote access • High cost of maintaining dual formats (p + e): • Staff reductions limit print processing capabilities • Space limitations inhibit print storage. • Print is susceptible to mother nature and takes up valuable floor space. • Increased availability of e-content: • “Approximately 60% of the universe of some 20,000 active peer-reviewed journals is available in electronic form.” • Definitive versions are now online renditions • Online becoming only option Judy Luther and Richard Johnson, The e-Only Tipping Point for Journals (Washington: Association of Research Libraries,2006).

  3. Librarians concerned with assuring long-term institutional access to e-content • E-content is licensed, not owned as with print • E-content licensing varies among publishers, particularly following cancellation • E-content is fragile, technology dependent • E-content analog, i.e. print, is not practical “insurance” If users are to remain connected to e-content, then reliable and trustworthy digital preservation solutions must be sought and implemented.

  4. What is Digital Preservation? • Many definitions! • June 2008: The Preservation and Reformatting Section (PARS) of the Association for Library Collections & Technical Services (ALCTS) announced a definition of digital preservation: www.ala.org/ala/alcts/newslinks/digipres/index.cfm. • Core element of digital preservation: • Set of activities aimed towards ensuring access to digital materials over time: • Ongoing, managed activities • Combines policies, strategies, and actions • Lifecycle management from point of creation

  5. What is Digital Preservation? • “Open Archives Information Systems” (OAIS): ISO Standard for functional design of digital archives. • “Trusted Digital Repositories: Attributes and Responsibilities”: RLG/OCLC characteristics and organizational responsibilities of digital archives: • OAIS Compliance • Administrative Responsibility • Organizational Viability • Financial Sustainability • Technological Stability • System Security • Procedural Accountability

  6. What Digital Preservation Is Not • Digitization for Preservation - Digitization of print results in digital materials which must themselves be preserved! • Back-up or byte storage on various media • Mirror sites or networks designed for reliable delivery

  7. JSTOR Responds to Digital Preservation Challenge • In 2002, JSTOR initiated a project known as the Electronic-Archiving Initiative to develop a technological infrastructure and sustainable business model to preserve scholarly e-journals. • Concluded that digital preservation requires significant infrastructure – technological, organizational, and staff expertise – and an economic model to support the ongoing work. • Portico was launched in 2005 by JSTOR, with support from The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, and the Library of Congress.

  8. Understanding Portico

  9. What is Portico? 1) An Organization • Non-for-profit • Exclusive focus on digital preservation “To preserve scholarly literature published in electronic form and to ensure that these materials remain available to future generations of scholars, researchers, and students.”

  10. What is Portico? 2) An Archive • Centralized, yet geographically replicated repository of current content (“born digital”) or digitized print (“reborn digital”). • Maintains formal archiving agreements with publishers to collect and preserve content. • Range from commercial, university press, and professional society publishers. • Content cannot be removed.

  11. What is Portico? • Initial focus on e-journal preservation 2) An Archive 57 Publishers 7.8 million articles 10,000 28 Publishers 3.6 million articles 12 Publishers 250,000 articles 7,500 Titles 5,000 Journals (57) 2,500 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009

  12. 1 Publisher e-Books (1) library collections d-collections What is Portico? • Initial focus on e-journal preservation, moving to e-books, d-collections and local library content. 2) An Archive 57 Publishers 7.8 million articles 10,000 28 Publishers 3.6 million articles 12 Publishers 250,000 articles 7,500 Titles 5,000 Journals (57) 2,500 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009

  13. Archive Delivery PDF/1.6 PDF/A 2) An Archive What is Portico? • Preserves the intellectual content of the journal, including the text, images, and limited functionality such as internal linking. XML source file and PDF page rendition are supplied by publisher and ingested in the Archive. • Utilizes the best practice of managed preservation  migrate e-content based on archival robustness of file format.

  14. What is Portico? 3) An Insurance Policy for Libraries • Libraries make annual archive support payment to help defray cost of long-term preservation. • Receive access to archived materials should they become lost, orphaned, or abandoned  Trigger Event: • When a publisher ceases operations and titles are no longer available from any other source • When a publisher ceases to publish and offer a title and it is not offered by another publisher or entity • When back issues are removed from a publisher’s offering and are not available elsewhere. • Upon catastrophic failure by publisher delivery platform for a sustained period of time. Trigger events initiate access to a participating library regardless of whether they previously subscribed to the title(s).

  15. What is Portico? 3) An Insurance Policy for Libraries • Libraries may rely upon the Portico archive for post-cancellation access, if a publisher chooses to name Portico as one of the mechanisms designated to meet this obligation. • Approximately 85% of archived titles have post-cancellation access coverage by Portico.

  16. Portico, Publishers, and Libraries: Partnering to enable a secure transition from print to e-resources

  17. The Portico, Publisher, Library Partnership • Robust preservation service protects content against technology obsolescence, fading human recall, and media deterioration. • Trusted, third-party archive of electronic scholarly content. Portico Publishers Libraries • 469 library participants, from large university systems to small liberal arts colleges; ~30% are International participants from 13 countries. • Global library community supports the shared infrastructure which reduces preservation cost for individual libraries. • Formal relationship with Portico assures efficient and ongoing preservation. • Supply source file content. • Make financial contribution.

  18. SAGE Publications dropped Graft 12/31/07… A Secure Transition – Responding to a Trigger Event

  19. A Secure Transition …and all Portico participants were provided access to Graft on 1/1/2008

  20. Making a Secure Transition: Library Participation in Portico • Cost-effective investment in the long-term preservation of e-scholarship. • Eliminates the need to purchase print as “insurance” for analogous e-versions. • Reduces floor space needs for storing print; facilitates re-capturing or re-purposing valuable space in the library.

  21. Portico Enabling a Secure Transition • An ARL library undergoing a rolling renovation to provide for more computer workstations and group-study areas is using Portico to inform their decision about moving print to offsite storage. • Medium-sized publicly funded college library responding to mandated 5% budget cut is using Portico to help decide print cancellations. • Medium private institution is using Portico to reduce microfilm holdings.

  22. Holdings Comparison Analysis • Free service available to both participating and non-participating libraries. • Compares library’s journal holdings – both print and electronic – to what is being preserved in Portico. • Spreadsheet of library ISSNs with Portico status of each: • Not-committed • Committed • Archived • And indication of whether the publisher of the ISSN has designated Portico as a post-cancellation access mechanism

  23. Questions?David Fritschdavid.fritsch@portico.orgwww.portico.org

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