Author name: Alicia Wise

CLOCKSS triggers NamesforLife

  NamesforLife contains micro-publications and was founded to solve a long-standing problem in biology: resolution of the ambiguity between nomenclature and biological objects and concepts. NamesforLife made names actionable. So… if you need to  know the relationship between Pyrobaculum neutrophilum and Thermoproteus neutrophilus dive in! Entries contain a historical record of both the name and […]

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CLOCKSS triggers Heterocycles

In keeping with its unique mandate, CLOCKSS is proud to offer continuing and public access to volumes 1-106 of Heterocycles. The trigger process involves coordination across multiple organizations, countries, and languages. It is ideally completed before content is removed from the web so that users can access the book or journal seamlessly. The process is

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Rule of Three: Digital Preservation for Open Journals at the University of Florida

  Contributors – Chelsea Johnston & Judy Russell For hundreds of years, libraries have collected, distributed, and preserved print content. The George A. Smathers Libraries at the University of Florida, as a large research library, participates in a significant array of preservation networks where we collaborate with other institutions to ensure future use for monographs,

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Node Case Study – Australian National University, Canberra

Roxanne Missingham, University Librarian and Chief Scholarly Information Officer, represents the Australian library community on the CLOCKSS board, and her team manages the CLOCKSS node server hosted at the Australian National University. Roxanne and her team: Raise awareness at CLOCKSS in Australia, New Zealand, and more broadly internationally and encourage more libraries and publishers to

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A thriving international community of digital preservation services built around LOCKSS

Today the Digital Preservation Coalition has published a blog entitled “A thriving international community of digital preservation services built around LOCKSS open-source software”. Contributors include Corey Davis, Chelsea Denault, Rebecca Dickson, Thib Guicherd-Callin, Charles Johnson, Anthony Leroy, Miguel Angel Mardero Arellano, Jamen McGranahan, Aaron Trehub, Hannah Wang, and our own Alicia Wise. You can read

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Digital preservation of licensed content

There is a new (free!) resource on the LIBLICENSE website: https://liblicense.crl.edu/resources/digital-preservation/ A 2022 review revealed that digital preservation language in many existing agreements is: • Vague • Unclear regarding the precise content and time depth preserved • Unnecessarily restrictive in terms of access and/or use • A conflation of long-term digital preservation and access with

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Miguel Angel Madero Arellano on the digital preservation of academic outputs in Brazil and around the world

Q: Should researchers feel confident that their contributions to scholarship are safe for the long-term? Recent research by Michelle Polchow at UC-Davis suggests that she can only find evidence that 40% of their journal collection is preserved in digital archives. Miguel: They can be confident if their research outputs are deposited in the information systems

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