FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

October 29, 2014
Read it online: http://bit.ly/ZZCJSK


Digital Preservation Network (DPN) Launches Member Content Pilot
A step toward establishing an operational, long-term preservation system shared 
across the academy

The Digital Preservation Network (DPN) is a federation of more than 50 academic 
institutional members who are collaboratively developing the means to preserve 
the complete scholarly record for future generations. DPN has launched a Member 
Content Pilot program as a step toward establishing an operational, long-term 
preservation system shared across the academy. The pilot is testing real-world 
interactions between DPN members through DPN “nodes” that ingest data from 
members of the Digital Preservation Network and package it for preservation 
storage. Three DPN nodes (Chronopolis/Duracloud, The Texas Preservation Node, 
and the Stanford Digital Repository) will be functioning as First Nodes. All 
five DPN nodes (the three named above along with APTrust and HathiTrust) will 
be providing replication services for the pilot data.

The higher education community has created many digital repositories to provide 
long-term preservation and access. DPN replicates multiple dark copies of these 
collections in diverse nodes to protect against the risk of catastrophic loss 
due to technology, organizational or natural disasters.

Participating DPN Member Content Pilot members include Chronopolis, University 
of California San Diego; Dartmouth University; the DuraSpace organization; 
Texas Preservation Node and; Yale University.

Steven Morales, DPN Chief Business Officer, is pleased with pilot project 
progress. “The DPN Technical Working group, comprised of the five Replicating 
Nodes for DPN, have done a phenomenal job linking together their existing 
repositories, he said, It feels great to be at a point where we can begin 
testing the network with real content.”

The pilot provides:

• A functioning preservation network capable of Services sufficient to allow 
First Nodes to accepting and replicating Member Pilot content and replicate it 
to Replicating Nodes using the developing DPN network.

• Opportunity for all participating Members and First Nodes to play out a 
realistic content deposit scenario and to discuss and capture the requirements 
and questions raised.

• A preliminary report to the DPN membership regarding results.

DPN Timeline

In 2012 DPN was launched with the support of founding member institutions. By 
2013 replicating nodes had been brought together to begin building the network, 
software and messaging system. 2014 has been a testing year. This summer three 
rounds of successful internal testing was completed. In the current phase real 
member content is being tested as DPN members have joined together as “first 
nodes”. Content has been identified and prepared for packaging into DPN “bags”.

Through the end of 2014 and the beginning of 2015 multiple rounds of testing 
will be ongoing. A soft launch of a production system will be available in the 
summer of 2015 through the end of 2016 with all member schools participating.

About The Digital Preservation Network

The Digital Preservation Network (DPN) will ensure that the complete scholarly 
record is preserved for future generations. It will be the long-term 
preservation solution shared collectively across the academy that protect local 
and consortia preservation efforts against all types of catastrophic failure. 
The supporting ecosystem enables higher education to own, maintain and control 
the scholarly record throughout time. While commercial entities may partner 
with us to contribute to this effort at different points in time depending on 
priorities and business models, final control must reside with the academy. 
http://www.dpn.org/.

Reply via email to