Keeping records of your website
WE Believe in Community conference
Local Government Web Network
20-21 August 2009
About State Records 1,553,894 website visits 55,948 reading room visitors 25,554 original archives used 42 community access points to State archives
collection across NSW 395 kilometres of noncurrent records stored at Western
Sydney 59.8 kilometres of standard format archives in custody 239,876 record items discoverable
State Records Annual Report 2007-8
Future Proof Digital records strategy for New South Wales
government Aims: improving digital recordkeeping across government implementing a digital archiving facility for New South
Wales government Products, services: Published guidance, standards, updates and training Ad hoc advice to public offices including Councils
What is a digital record?Digital information captured at a specific point in time that is kept as evidence of business activity.
Why?, Twin Peaks, 2009, http://www.flickr.com/photos/twinpeaks/3341
130550/in/photostream/
Some digital records are State records That is, digital records that are “..made and kept, or
received and kept, by any person in the course of the exercise of official functions in a public office, or for any purpose of a public office, or for the use of a public office.” State Records Act 1998, s.3 (1)
Council websites Many official functions of a Council are performed via the
Council website Much of the information on the website will satisfy the
criteria for being State records Digital State records must be managed in conformance
with the requirements of the Standard on digital recordkeeping
Standard on digital recordkeeping A set of 9 minimum requirements for making and keeping
digital records, to ensure Councils have available, authentic, meaningful evidence of their past business: minimum requirements for defining which records are
saved into digital recordkeeping systems & what these systems’ minimum functionalities must be
minimum requirements for recordkeeping metadata, and
minimum requirements for recordkeeping metadata management.
Government 2.0 – depends on recordkeeping! Government 2.0 Issues Paper cites the OECD Principles
for public sector information, including: 5. Integrity. Maximising the integrity and availability of
information through the use of best practices in information management. Developing and implementing appropriate safeguards to protect information from unauthorised modification or from intentional or unintentional denial of authorised access to information.
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/0/27/40826024.pdf or http://tinyurl.com/kpgova.
Ok so how do we do it?
1. Share responsibility
Sharing, Ryancr, 2006, http://www.flickr.com/photos/ryanr/142455033/
2. Tackle high risk business first
‘Man on wire’, 2009 http://witneyman.files.wordpress.com/2009/02/man-on-wire.jpg,
3. Assess website records type/s
4.Identify the recordkeeping requirements Is there a business / regulatory / societal requirement for a record to
be kept? How often does this information change? Are all changes required as
records? What is the risk in not keeping this record? Or keeping some
changes but not all? Is the information already captured as a record elsewhere? Is it necessary to (also) capture the web version as a record? the
date when the page was published / taken down, by whom? the page exactly as it looked or just its content?
How long does the record need to be kept?
5. Devise an appropriate recordkeeping strategy Consider the recordkeeping requirement, including:
The type of record needing to be kept The rate of change of the information Static / dynamic / transactional? The retention period Risk
And determine: How (technically) to capture the record How often to keep a record Who is responsible Where to keep the record
Options for keeping web records Retain in WCMS – use ‘roll back capabilities’ - short term
value, needs to be kept exactly as viewed Copy / export documents or pages to an EDRMS –
necessary when records are longer term value RSS feed to records manager – for frequently updated
pages Web harvesting – good for ‘snapshots’ – but may miss
dynamic content and some pages eg. Heritrix, HTTrack Capture transactions at the web server – to save requests
and responses including on the fly content. For high risk business. eg Vignette, PageVault
Example 1: Council meeting papers and minutes Long term retention (Required as State archives) Possibly already captured in Council recordkeeping
system Council may need to demonstrate date published to meet
s.12 requirements Options Make a record of uploading of documents, point to
records already kept in recordkeeping system Also save web published versions to recordkeeping
system
Example 2: News updates
Mixture of high and low risk information Important to keep a record of when item was published in
some cases Selective capture not easy Mixture of short and long term retention periods Options: RSS feed to records manager Automated capture of each version of the news page
as published
Example 3: Website transactions
Online surveys, forms – where low risk the record may best be made in back end systems (eg change of address). Keep a record of the form and all changes.
More complex transactions eg interactive maps – if high risk there may be value in capture of interactions (sessions), but will be high cost
Compromise is to ensure records are kept of the capability and contents and dates in use
..and finally
Don’t forget to ‘Future Proof’ your web records!
ObsolescenceObsolescence can affect hardware, software and even the arrangement of the data in a stored file.Obsolescence can occur at an alarmingly fast rate.
MAGLEV Train and Rickshaw, Shanghai, Soctech, 2005, http://www.flickr.com/photos/soctech/43279549/
File formats may be superseded
MacDraw, FHKE, 2007, http://www.flickr.com/photos/fhke/370326408/
Storage medium may be superseded
Magnetic tape
Gallery of Obsolete Formats 1, jen-the-librarian, 2007 http://www.flickr.com/photos/jennieb/921595498/
The device needed to read the medium may no longer be produced
Sony Betamax, Nesster, 2009, http://www.flickr.com/photos/nesster/3714783252/
Software used to create, manage or access digital content may be superseded
Windows 1.0: the MS-DOS executive, Renan Birck, 2007, http://www.flickr.com/photos/renanbirck/354258596/
Computers themselves are being superseded
Old computers, eurlief, 2006, http://www.flickr.com/photos/eurleif/255241547/
Vendors merge, emerge and fade
GONE
Things can fall apart
Broken computer. Miss Rogue, 2007, http://www.flickr.com/photos/missrogue/347361369/
Tips for long term accessibility of your web records Use open formats Keep records in recordkeeping systems Comply with Standard on digital recordkeeping to
ensure adequate metadata Migrate with care Avoid removable media
For more information
www.records.nsw.gov.au http://futureproof.records.nsw.gov.au Cassie Findlay Ph: (02) 8247 8629 [email protected]