Ms. Rhodes explores URL stability, measured by the prevalence of link rot over a three-year period, among the original URLs for law- and policy-related materials published to the web and archived though the Chesapeake Project, a collaborative digital preservation initiative under way in the law library community. The results demonstrate a significant increase in link rot over time in materials originally published to seemingly stable organization, government, and state web sites
The web is a fluid environment and web pages often change in nature or disappear altogether. Scholar...
Citations are the cornerstone upon which judicial opinions and law review articles stand. Within thi...
The present study was conducted to examine the accessibility and corrosion of web references cited i...
Ms. Rhodes explores URL stability, measured by the prevalence of link rot over a three-year period, ...
A webpage’s URL is often referred to as its address, but frequently it is more like a short-term sub...
From the earliest days of the web, users have been aware of the fickleness of linking to content. In...
Slides from a public class offered at NYPL Research Libraries, September 2018Have you ever cited an ...
The failure of a web address to link to the appropriate online source is a significant problem facin...
The proliferation of legal materials published directly to the Web with no print counterpart poses a...
It is well established that Web documents are ephemeral in nature. The literature now suggests that ...
LibGuide providing information on the University of Rhode Island University Libraries\u27 implementa...
All text is ephemeral. Some texts are more ephemeral than others. The web has proved to be among the...
A 2013 study found that 70% of URLs in law journal articles and 50% of URLs cited by U.S. Supreme Co...
As librarians, we do a fair amount of research online for ourselves and the faculty and students we ...
The Web is increasingly used as a source for content of datasets of various types, especially multim...
The web is a fluid environment and web pages often change in nature or disappear altogether. Scholar...
Citations are the cornerstone upon which judicial opinions and law review articles stand. Within thi...
The present study was conducted to examine the accessibility and corrosion of web references cited i...
Ms. Rhodes explores URL stability, measured by the prevalence of link rot over a three-year period, ...
A webpage’s URL is often referred to as its address, but frequently it is more like a short-term sub...
From the earliest days of the web, users have been aware of the fickleness of linking to content. In...
Slides from a public class offered at NYPL Research Libraries, September 2018Have you ever cited an ...
The failure of a web address to link to the appropriate online source is a significant problem facin...
The proliferation of legal materials published directly to the Web with no print counterpart poses a...
It is well established that Web documents are ephemeral in nature. The literature now suggests that ...
LibGuide providing information on the University of Rhode Island University Libraries\u27 implementa...
All text is ephemeral. Some texts are more ephemeral than others. The web has proved to be among the...
A 2013 study found that 70% of URLs in law journal articles and 50% of URLs cited by U.S. Supreme Co...
As librarians, we do a fair amount of research online for ourselves and the faculty and students we ...
The Web is increasingly used as a source for content of datasets of various types, especially multim...
The web is a fluid environment and web pages often change in nature or disappear altogether. Scholar...
Citations are the cornerstone upon which judicial opinions and law review articles stand. Within thi...
The present study was conducted to examine the accessibility and corrosion of web references cited i...