The Memento Project - Time Travel for the Web - wins major international award 
for digital preservation
London, 1st December 2010 (embargoed till 2200 local time)

The Institute for Conservation and the Digital Preservation Coalition (DPC) are 
delighted to announce that the Memento Project led by Herbert Van De Sompel and 
colleagues of Los Alamos National Laboratory and Michael Nelson and colleagues 
of Old Dominion University, USA, has won the Digital Preservation Award 2010.

(http://www.dpconline.org/newsroom)

'Memento offers an elegant and easily deployed method that reunites web 
archives with their home on the live web,' explained Richard Ovenden, chair of 
the Digital Preservation Coalition.  'It opens web archives to tens of millions 
of new users and signals a dramatic change in the way we use and perceive 
digital archives.'

'The ability to change and update pages is one of the web's greatest advantages 
but it introduces a sort of structured instability which makes it hard to 
depend on web pages in the long term.  For more than a decade services like the 
UK Web Archive and the Internet Archive have provided a stable but partial 
memory of a fragment of the web - but users had no way of linking between 
current content and earlier versions held by web archives.'

'The Memento project resolves this by letting users set a time preference in 
their browser.  The underlying technology then deploys basic, under-used 
features of the HTTP protocol to direct users to whichever archived copy of a 
website most closely matches their request'.

'The really impressive part of Memento is how it uses existing and widely 
deployed content negotiation tools embedded within the architecture of the web 
to connect users with archives', commented Kevin Ashley, Chair of the Judges 
for the Digital Preservation Award.  'Most of the technology required to make 
the service work is already widely deployed.'

'The Memento architecture means you no longer need to search archives or go to 
a special website to recover earlier versions of pages: with Memento our 
archives are always, already available.  The benefit for users is obvious, but 
in creating simple access it transforms the value and impact of web archiving.  
In an environment where web archives are widely used and understood, the 
creation of web archives will seem less like a specialised or esoteric concern.'

'Winning the Digital preservation Award is a really significant achievement', 
explained William Kilbride, Executive Director of the Digital Preservation 
Coalition which sponsored the award.

'There is no other prize like it, so it attracts genuinely international field 
and is only awarded after exacting scrutiny.  An expert panel subjects ensures 
a rigorous analysis of each nomination and the whole membership of the DPC is 
invited to comment on and select their favourite projects.  The shortlist, 
which was announced in Vienna this September included two US-based projects, 
one Trans-Atlantic blue ribbon task force, a pan European project and an 
initiative from the National Archives in the UK which gained a huge amount of 
press attention at the time of the General Election.'

'To have won the Digital Preservation Award in the context of so many strong 
candidates should be taken as a significant mark of esteem from colleagues and 
peers.'

The Digital Preservation Award is one of five awards organised by a working 
party of the Institute for Conservation (ICON), known collectively as The 
Conservation Awards.  Each award celebrates different aspect of the highest 
standards of conservation skills, innovation and research, collections care and 
digital preservation.  The Awards, which were launched in 1991, are supported 
by Icon and sponsored by The Pilgrim Trust, the Digital Preservation Coalition 
(DPC), and the Anna Plowden Trust.  Since 2005, the Awards have also been 
generously supported by Sir Paul McCartney.

Alison Richmond, ICON CE, commented: 'In today's current difficult economic 
climate, with many of our cultural heritage organisations under threat, it is 
incredibly important to celebrate the outstanding quality of current 
conservation and research being undertaken in Britain and further afield today. 
The winning projects clearly demonstrate that conservation of our cultural is 
not an end in itself, but a passport to wider access, and deeper knowledge and 
enjoyment of our heritage. '

The Awards were presented at a ceremony followed by a drinks reception and held 
at the Royal Institution of Great Britain, London on 1 December 2010. Roy Clare 
(CEO of the Museums Libraries and Archives Council), speaking at the awards, 
said: 'The art and science of conservation are vital to sustaining public 
understanding and enjoyment of cultural heritage and collections of all kinds, 
for this and future generations. The profession faces growing demands to 
respond openly and ever-more creatively to new standards, technologies, public 
expectations and resource constraints. The context is challenging, but I 
welcome ICON's determination to work with members and partners to shape 
effective strategies for ensuring a vibrant future for conservation.'

--
Dr William Kilbride FSA
Executive Director
Digital Preservation Coalition



44 (0)141 330 4522
http://www.dpconline.org/
will...@dpconline.org



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