Joint Event with DPC - Intellectual Property Rights and Digital Preservation
Zak Mensah on Tuesday 25 October 2011 Tweet this!
We are very pleased to annouce a day long event in collaboration with the Digital Preservation Coalition in tackling current and upcoming trends in digital preservation and how issues of Intellectual Property Rights affect these.
Digital preservation helps to deliver lasting impact from highly prized and valuable digital resources. This is often understood as a technical challenge but experience shows that a poor fit between technology, processes and regulations constrains preservation actions and significantly inhibit the benefits which long-term access ought to deliver. Operating within a complicated and evolving legal and regulatory landscape, the digital preservation community needs a clear understanding of what it is permitted to do and what risks might inhere within technical processes like format shifting, migration, bit replication and emulation. Foremost among these challenges is the management, protection and evolution of intellectual property rights. It has long been recognised that digital rights management and encryption present a barrier to preserving content. But intellectual property rights do not just impact on the contents of archives but applies also to the containers, wrappers and formats which make the contents accessible.
This DPC briefing day, co-hosted with JISC Digital Media, is intended to examine and discuss key concepts of intellectual property rights as they impact on digital preservation. It will provide a forum to review and debate the latest developments in the law as it applies to preservation and it will initiate a discussion on how simple legal processes can be deployed. Based on commentary and case studies from leaders in the field, participants will be presented with emerging tools and technologies and will be encouraged to propose and debate the future for these developments. The day will include a discussion of:
- Intellectual property rights in format migration and emulation
- Intellectual property rights in information and product lifecycles
- Licensing preservation actions and digital rights management for the long term
- Emerging trends and tools for managing intellectual property in preservation
Who should come?
- Collections managers, curators and archivists in all institutions
- Tools developers and policy makers in digital preservation
- Innovators and researchers in information policy and management
- Innovators and researchers in computing science
- Vendors and providers of digital preservation services
Places are strictly limited and should be booked in advance. There is no cost involved to attend.
Register online at: http://www.dpconline.org/events

Jim Fong Canton. Lu Rongting (1856 - 1927), established a capital of the combined provinces of Guangxi and Guangdong in May 1916, and withdrew from Canton in October 1920. His armies were destroyed in 1921. Image from the Visualising China JISC funded project, used under a Creative Commons License



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