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*The National Software Reference Library (NSRL)
<https://www.nist.gov/software-quality-group/national-software-reference-library-nsrl>
is
not a lending library, but in December of 2004, they bent the rules to help
the Food and Drug Administration save lives.*
An extremely concentrated batch of botulin, which forms the basis of botox
and is potentially deadly in high concentrations, was misprocessed and
distributed by a medical supply company in Miami.


In response, the FDA immediately gathered the names and addresses of those
that had received the misprocessed botox via a data file created on a 2003
version of a popular business software application. Using the only version
of the software available to them - the 2004 version - the agents were
unable to open the data file and retrieve the information they needed.

Fortunately, one of the agents was familiar with the National Software
Reference Library. Even more fortunately, the NSRL had the 2003 version of
the software and was able to hand it off to an agent who immediately put it
on the next flight to Miami. You can read more about this incident in the
Library of Congress (2013) Preserving.exe: Toward a National Strategy for
Software Preservation Report
<http://www.digitalpreservation.gov/multimedia/documents/PreservingEXE_report_final101813.pdf>
.

Software preservation saved lives. This is a dramatic example, to be sure,
but one that speaks to the immediate and increasing importance of
preserving both the object *and* the environment that renders an object
meaningful.

To that end, the Software Preservation Network
<http://www.softwarepreservationnetwork.org/> is creating a space where
organizations from industry, academia, government, cultural heritage, and
the public sphere can contribute their myriad skills and capabilities
toward collaborative solutions that will ensure persistent access to all
software and all software-dependent objects. Our goal is to make it easier
to deposit, discover, and reuse software.

As SPN transitions this Fall from an exclusively grant-funded and in-kind
support model to a self-sustaining member-driven organization, I hope you
will consider joining our growing community of practice. You can learn more
about SPN’s accomplishments, our plans for the future, and how to join and
support this community through our newly released Software Preservation
Network Prospectus <http://www.softwarepreservationnetwork.org/prospectus/>.

If you have any questions, please reach out to me directly (
[log in to unmask]) or to Jessica Meyerson ([log in to unmask]). We
will be accepting applications for organizational memberships and
sponsorships through December 14, 2018.


The information above is adapted from the following report:

National Digital Information and Preservation Program, Library of Congress.
Preserving.exe: Toward a National Strategy for Software Preservation.
October 2013.
http://www.digitalpreservation.gov/multimedia/documents/PreservingEXE_report_final101813.pdf



*Katherine Skinner, PhD*
Executive Director, Educopia Institute
http://educopia.org

Working from Greensboro, NC
[log in to unmask] | 404 783 2534

Pronouns: she/her




*Katherine Skinner, PhD*
Executive Director, Educopia Institute
http://educopia.org

Working from Greensboro, NC
[log in to unmask] | 404 783 2534

Pronouns: she/her

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