The Koninklijke Bibliotheek, the Dutch National Library (KB-NL), started in 2007 the project “web archiving” based on a selection of Dutch websites. The initial selection of 1,000 websites has currently grown into over 12,000 selected web sites, crawled on different intervals. Although due to legal restrictions the current use is limited to the KB-NL reading room, it is important that the KB-NL includes the requirements of the (future) users in her approach of creating a web collection. With respect to the long term preservation of the collection, we also need to incorporate the requirements for long term archiving in our approach, as described in the Open Archival Information Model (OAIS)1. This article describes the results of a research ...
The central aim of this thesis is to investigate the current state of web archive research in Irelan...
Web archiving is crucial to ensure that cultural, scientific and social heritage on the web remains...
Panel: National webs Niels Brügger, School of Communication and Culture – Media Studies, Aarhus Univ...
In 2006 the National Library of the Netherlands (KB) started archiving a selection of Dutch websites...
With a view to ensuring future access to digital cultural heritage, the first Web collections were e...
The need for studying and promoting web-archiving for longterm information preservation and accessib...
A key issue for web archivists (particularly in national libraries) and for scholars alike is the me...
Despite its long history, the Belgian web is currently not systematically archived. Without a Belgia...
Denmark began web archiving in 2005 and the experiences are presented with a specific focus on colle...
The UC San Diego Library has been collecting and providing access to archived web content since 2007...
International audienceThe Internet has been covered by legal deposit legislation in France since 200...
Webpages have been playing a key role in the creation and dissemination of information in recent dec...
International audienceThe collections held by the National Library of France (BnF) are part of the n...
The Web is a virtually infinite information space, and archiving its entirety, all its aspects, is ...
This work presents a brief overview on the history of Web archiving projects in some English speakin...
The central aim of this thesis is to investigate the current state of web archive research in Irelan...
Web archiving is crucial to ensure that cultural, scientific and social heritage on the web remains...
Panel: National webs Niels Brügger, School of Communication and Culture – Media Studies, Aarhus Univ...
In 2006 the National Library of the Netherlands (KB) started archiving a selection of Dutch websites...
With a view to ensuring future access to digital cultural heritage, the first Web collections were e...
The need for studying and promoting web-archiving for longterm information preservation and accessib...
A key issue for web archivists (particularly in national libraries) and for scholars alike is the me...
Despite its long history, the Belgian web is currently not systematically archived. Without a Belgia...
Denmark began web archiving in 2005 and the experiences are presented with a specific focus on colle...
The UC San Diego Library has been collecting and providing access to archived web content since 2007...
International audienceThe Internet has been covered by legal deposit legislation in France since 200...
Webpages have been playing a key role in the creation and dissemination of information in recent dec...
International audienceThe collections held by the National Library of France (BnF) are part of the n...
The Web is a virtually infinite information space, and archiving its entirety, all its aspects, is ...
This work presents a brief overview on the history of Web archiving projects in some English speakin...
The central aim of this thesis is to investigate the current state of web archive research in Irelan...
Web archiving is crucial to ensure that cultural, scientific and social heritage on the web remains...
Panel: National webs Niels Brügger, School of Communication and Culture – Media Studies, Aarhus Univ...