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Dear NDSA Community,

Happy Summer!

At midyear, we are writing to provide an update on events and activities,
and to call for your participation.

Welcome  to New Members

Please join us in welcoming the  Boston College Libraries, Code Ocean,
Council of Prairie and Pacific University Libraries (COPPUL), Drexel
University Libraries, Grand Valley State University Libraries, Komodo
Cloud, University of Arizona Libraries, Code Ocean, Washington State
University’s Center for Digital Scholarship and Curation, which joined as
members NDSA in 2017.

They join the following other new members who have become part of NDSA's
community in the course of the last year or so: James Madison University,
the Modern Language Association, Bryn Mawr College, the Digital
Preservation Network (DPN), Digital Bedrock, the Gates Library, Purchase
College Library, the Vintage Computer Federation, OhioLINK, the University
of Houston Libraries, and Academic Preservation Trust (APTrust).

You can view the full member list (currently over 200) on the NDSA web
site: view the full member list <http://ndsa.org/members-list/>.
Registration Open for Digital Preservation 2017

Registration is now open for our annual conference, Digital Preservation
2017 <http://ndsa.org/meetings/>: “Preservation is Political,” in
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, October 25-26, 2017.

Last year our Digital Preservation 2016 conference (the first hosted by
DLF) boasted high attendance, and dozens of sessions, panels, and working
group meetings. Submission received for 2017 are even higher --  and this
year’s program promises to be very rich.

Call for Participation: 2017 National Agenda for Digital Stewardship

The National Agenda working group seeks members who will contribute to the
organization, editing, and contents of the 2017 National Agenda for Digital
Stewardship.

Please contact the Chair, Micah Altman ([log in to unmask]) by August 15,
2017.

The NDSA National Agenda for Digital Stewardship integrates the perspective
of dozens of experts and hundreds of institutions to provide funders and
executive decision‐makers insight into emerging technological trends, gaps
in digital stewardship capacity, and key areas for funding, research and
development to ensure that today’s valuable digital content remains
accessible and comprehensible in the future, supporting a thriving economy,
a robust democracy, and a rich cultural heritage.

The previous edition of the National Agenda was published in 2015, and
received considerable attention from both practitioner communities and
research funders. The 2017 edition will characterize the most technical,
research, and organizational challenges that offer the greatest potential
to advance or delay digital preservation in the next 3-5 years, and
identify key approaches, initiatives, and organizations engaged in these
challenge areas.

Over the course of the year, this working group will meet regularly to
conduct a survey of NDSA members on digital preservation challenges; review
emerging publications and initiatives; edit the agenda document; and manage
the external review and response process.


Call for Comment: Community Guidelines and Code of Conduct

In support of the Digital Preservation conference, the NDSA coordinating
committee and working group chairs piloted a draft set of community
communication guidelines and code of conduct. This includes a specific code
of conduct for meetings, and  general norms for respectful communication
and collaboration -- whether the mode is e-mail, phone, twitter, telegraph
or IRL.

The published draft is here:

http://ndsa.org/guidelines/

Please make comment or suggest revisions using this collaborative document:

https://docs.google.com/document/d/1scPMihnjzYdYFf2kXvSgOPto8Ej4XFMMhejMJSEYFLo/edit

In the fall the coordinating committee will work to incorporate comments
and suggestions, and then circulate a revised draft to interest groups for
final review, and to NSDA-ALL for approval.

Recent NDSA Publications

Web Archiving in the United States

Last year, the NDSA Web Archiving working group launched the third annual
web archiving survey. The results are now in. This report describes the
current state of the field, tracks the evolution of the field over the last
few years, and points to future opportunities and developments. One
substantial finding of the report is that:

“Many areas of web archiving exist that elicit a broad desire for
collaboration, though many institutions feel they have neither the time nor
resources to participate in collaborative activities. The community and the
stakeholders that value the content the community stewards needs to invest
research and development effort to create sustainable frameworks that
facilitate meaningful, practical and effective collaboration.”

The full report is openly available
<http://ndsa.org/documents/WebArchivingintheUnitedStates_A2016Survey.pdf>.

Trends in Digital Preservation Capacity and Practice

This year, the Fixity Working Group will be launching the third NDSA-wide
survey on storage and fixity practices.  To complement this, a new report,
based on the previous two surveys (spanning four years) is being published
on the NDSA website, and through D-Lib. One substantial finding is that:

“There is considerable room for improvement in the tactics organizations
are using to ensure and be able to attest to the fixity of their content.
This improvement is attainable as there are a range of tools that can
support this work. It is critical that organizations stewarding information
for the long haul work toward performing at least basic levels of fixity
checking.”

The complete article is openly available
<http://www.dlib.org/dlib/july17/gallinger/07gallinger.html>.


We encourage all NDSA community members to read the new Web Archiving
survey, comment on the draft community guidelines,  and to continue to
engage with their interest groups to identify and launch working group
projects.



Very Best,

Micah Altman

On behalf of the NDSA Coordinating Committee

------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Micah Altman, Ph.D. <http://informatics.mit.edu>           Twitter:
@drmaltman
Director of Research -- MIT Libraries; Head/Scientist, Program on
Information Science
My pronouns are: he / him
"Entia non sunt multiplicanda sine necessitate" - Doctor Invincibilis
(Corollary, "Ad indicia spectate.")