Dear All,

Priority registration for the next DPC briefing day, 'Links That Last: Linked 
Data, Persistent Identifiers and Digital Preservation', at Lucy Cavendish 
College Cambridge on 19th July 2012 is now open for members of the Coalition.


Widely-distributed, highly-volatile and tightly-integrated data streams create 
a particular challenge for preservation.  One could be forgiven for thinking 
that digital preservation was principally concerned with safeguarding of 
self-contained packets of information that may have interdependencies but which 
are so carefully tucked into stand-alone files that they have a sort of 
independence and autonomy which ensures their integrity.  This has never been 
the case.  Nonetheless recent developments in data presentation have shown the 
potential that can be gained from liberating data from clumsy format wrappers 
and enabling retrieval and integration of individual data points.  The emerging 
'Linked Data' approach enables new types of interaction with and between 
structured data and it challenges existing paradigms of data sharing.  It also 
challenges us to think about preservation in new ways: it creates the potential 
for long chains of interdependencies and it means we need to think all the more 
carefully about provenance and authenticity.  The question arises as to whether 
Linked Data will simply deliver a new generation of broken links - stifling the 
innovation it promises and creating the conditions for new and avoidable forms 
of disenfranchisement.



Simultaneously, the digital preservation community has put considerable effort 
into the development of persistent identifiers, services that seek to ensure 
that essential links are not lost and that the highly distributed contexts in 
which information is presented are protected against the vagaries of time and 
obsolescence.

This briefing day will introduce the topics of persistent identifiers and 
linked data, discussing the practical implications of both approaches to 
digital preservation.  It will consider the viability of services that offer 
persistent identifiers and what these offer in the context of preservation; it 
will review recent developments in linked data, considering how such data sets 
might be preserved; and by introducing these two parallel topics it will go on 
to consider whether both approaches can feasibly be linked to create a new 
class of robust linked data. Based on commentary and case studies from leaders 
in the field, participants will be encouraged to consider practical 
implications for their own work and new directions for research and development 
in the field.

Members have access to priority registration at no cost online at: 
http://www.dpconline.org/events/details/47-linksthatlast?xref=49

Non-members will be invited to register from Monday 11th June

All best wishes,

William

--
Dr William Kilbride FSA
Executive Director
Digital Preservation Coalition

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

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