Open Archival Information System

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An Open Archival Information System (or OAIS) is an archive, consisting of an organization of people and systems, that has accepted the responsibility to preserve information and make it available for a Designated Community.

OAIS is the ISO reference model for Open Archival Information System. The OAIS reference model is defined by a recommendation of the Consultative Committee for Space Data Systems[1].

The information being maintained has been deemed to need "long term preservation", even if the OAIS itself is not permanent. "Long term" is long enough to be concerned with the impacts of changing technologies, including support for new media and data formats, or with a changing user community. "Long term" may extend indefinitely. In this reference model there is a particular focus on digital information, both as the primary forms of information held and as supporting information for both digitally and physically archived materials. Therefore, the model accommodates information that is inherently non-digital (e.g., a physical sample), but the modeling and preservation of such information is not addressed in detail.

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[edit] The reference model

The reference model:

  • provides a framework for the understanding and increased awareness of archival concepts needed for long term digital information preservation and access.
  • provides the concepts needed by non-archival organizations to be effective participants in the preservation process.
  • provides a framework, including terminology and concepts, for describing and comparing architectures and operations of existing and future archives.
  • provides a framework for describing and comparing different long term preservation strategies and techniques.
  • provides a basis for comparing the data models of digital information preserved by archives and for discussing how data models and the underlying information may change over time.
  • provides a foundation that may be expanded by other efforts to cover long-term preservation of information that is not in digital form (e.g., physical media and physical samples).
  • expands consensus on the elements and processes for long-term digital information preservation and access, and promotes a larger market which vendors can support.
  • guides the identification and production of OAIS-related standards.

[edit] Requirements of the system

The OAIS must:

  • Negotiate for and accept appropriate information from information producers.
  • Obtain sufficient control of the information provided to the level needed to ensure long term preservation.
  • Determine, either by itself or in conjunction with other parties, which communities should become the designated community and, therefore, should be able to understand the information provided.
  • Ensure that the information to be preserved is independently understandable to the designated community. In other words, the community should be able to understand the information without needing the assistance of the experts who produced the information.
  • Follow documented policies and procedures which ensure that the information is preserved against all reasonable contingencies, and which enable the information to be disseminated as authenticated copies of the original, or as traceable to the original.
  • Make the preserved information available to the designated community.

[edit] References

[edit] See also

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