Categoriearchief: Digital Preservation

Archiving Machines

Review article of: A. Acker (2025). Archiving Machines. Technology and the Future of Memory Institutions, MIT Press, Cambridge (Ms)-London, 248 pp. To download as open source: https://direct.mit.edu/books/oa-monograph/6055/Archiving-MachinesFrom-Punch-Cards-to-Platforms.

Voor een Nederlandse vertaling klik hier.

Dr G.J. van Bussel

The author

Amelia Acker is an associate professor in the School of Communication and Information at Rutgers University. Her scholarship focuses on the generation, standardization, and preservation of digital information. Her research centres on three pillars: data technologies (the tools used to generate and capture information), digital archives (the management of digital data), and information in­frastruc­tures (the systems that facilitate long-term preservation and serve as repositories for cultural memory). Prior to her appointment at Rutgers, she served as Director of the Critical Data Studies Lab at the University of Texas at Austin. She led interdisciplinary research initiatives concerning the societal impact of ubiquitous mobile technology, public and academic understanding of data systems, and frameworks that enable information to remain searchable and functional over time. 1

The key thesis

Archiving Machines. From Punch Cards to Platforms offers an historical overview of storage technologies and processes, tracing their evolution from the data banks of the 1960s to the emergence of contemporary digital platforms. At the heart of Acker’s argument is the assertion that storage systems function as ‘archiving machines’ that actively shape memory, regulate access, and distribute power. Grounded in Science and Technology Studies and Infrastructure Theory, but also using insights from Media Studies, she contends that these machines define the boundaries of cultural memory, determine its control, and define its organization.

As she clarifies, these machines are ‘not about traditional archives found in institutions but rather about how accessing knowledge has transformed as computational pro­cesses for storing and managing data developed, thus putting pressure on concepts of archives, archive, and archiving. In other words, this book explores how ‘archive’ became a verb with the rise of data-­driven recordkeeping to unpack the stakes of archiving machines’ (p. 21). Her work emphasizes the systemic impact of digital and platform-based infrastructures on collective memory, in particular the ways in which automation and corporate platforms have assumed roles once reserved for archival institutions and professional archivists.

She states ‘how firms who play an infrastructural role in data archives have become ­ today’s archons – ­ those that govern and assert power through the functional sovereignty of data archives’ (p. 11).Acker demonstrates how storage technologies have not only redefined what is preserved but have also reshaped conceptions of memory, ownership, and institutional accountability. Her thesis that archiving machines shape memory and produce distinct regimes of access and data sovereignty provides historical context for the challenges in digital stewardship that she identifies in the book. 2

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AI and digital preservation

Interesting paper (february 2024) about the role of AI for the preservation of archives.

According to the abstract:
‘This paper delves into the historical evolution of preservation methods driven by technological advancements as, throughout history, libraries, archives, and museums have grappled with the challenge of preserving historical collections, while many of the traditional preservation methods are costly and involve a lot of manual (human) effort. AI being the catalyst for transformation could change this reality and perhaps redefine the process of preservation; thus, this paper explores the emerging trend of incorporating AI technology into preservation practices and provides predictions regarding the transformative role of Artificial Intelligence in preservation for the future. With that in mind, this paper addresses the following questions: could AI be what changes or creates a paradigm shift in how preservation is done?; and could it be the thing that will change the way history is safeguarded?’

I don’t really know if it would be a paradigm shift or that it changes the way archives are safeguarded.

That AI might redefine the process of preservation: I don’t doubt that. The process of preservation can be automated and the information needed to do so is available. So, it is quite possible that an Artificial Narrow Intelligence would be of enormous help in processing al those routine tasks now done by people.

But: it would mean indexing all known data about the process (processes) of preservation and meticulously designing an AI driven process, with several human controls.

Citation:
Z. Teel (2024). ‘Artificial Intelligence’s Role in Digitally Preserving Historic Archives’, Preservation, Digital Technology & Culture, Vol 53, NO. 1. Online source. For download here.

Published in a LinkedIn post in september 2024.

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