![]() |
||
Media inside paper files occur in records since the 1980s and will continue to do so for many years. |
||
Group: Portable Media |
Trend in 2021: |
Consensus Decision |
Added to List:2019 |
Trend towards greater risk |
Previously: Critically Endangered |
Imminence of Action Action is recommended within twelve months, detailed assessment is a priority. |
Significance of Loss The loss of tools, data or services within this group would impact on many people and sectors. |
Effort to Preserve It would require a small effort to prevent losses in this group, such as the deployment of proven preservation tools or techniques. |
Examples Digital media mixed with paper files in records offices and filing cabinets of almost every kind of enterprise. |
||
‘Practically Extinct’ in the Presence of Aggravating Conditions Unsustainable effort to assess; exotic or obsolete media; poor storage; lack of descriptive labelling; |
||
‘Endangered’ in the Presence of Good Practice Carefully labelled; managed programme of assessment and retrieval; robust media used |
||
2021 Review This entry was added in 2019 to report the significant amounts of digital media being transferred to archives fold into traditional files. The 2019 Jury noted that it is relatively simple to preserve this material once identified using standard tools, but it can be an ‘unknown unknown’ and that assessment can seem overwhelming and therefore it may overlaps with other portable media risks but has a higher risk classification. The 2021 Jury agreed on a trend towards greater due to the increased time sensitivity and need for conducting collection audits as soon as possible determine what you have to then work out a plan about opening carriers, assessing files and extracting them if significant. |
||
Additional Jury Comments Highly dependent on who is looking after the portable formats. There are good examples, for example in libraries, where disks are stored at the back of books or front of magazines and can be processed at the point of acquisition. In archives, however, dealing with bit-level preservation of external media (often on legacy formats) is largely an unquantified problem, and so resource commitments will not be in place. So there is a method and tools but simply no time committed and no proper assessment either. In other agencies, the issue will not have even been considered, and for them, it will be much harder over time with some inevitable loss. I would say media in paper files dates to earlier than the 1990s, floppy disks really back to the 1970s |