This page is a timeline of digital preservation and Web archiving. It covers various aspects of saving and preserving digital data, whether they are born-digital or not.
Digital preservation encompasses a variety of efforts and technologies, so its history can be viewed through various trends in these separate efforts:
Year | Month and date | Topic | Details |
---|---|---|---|
1972 | Versioning | Marc Rochkind develops the Source Code Control System at Bell Labs. | |
1982 | October | Physical storage | The compact disc (CD) as well as the CD player first become commercially available in Japan.[1] [2] |
1987 | June | Physical storage | The term "RAID" is invented by David Patterson, Garth A. Gibson, and Randy Katz at the University of California, Berkeley in 1987. In their June 1988 paper "A Case for Redundant Arrays of Inexpensive Disks (RAID)", presented at the SIGMOD conference, they would argue that the top performing mainframe disk drives of the time could be beaten on performance by an array of the inexpensive drives that had been developed for the growing personal computer market. Although failures would rise in proportion to the number of drives, by configuring for redundancy, the reliability of an array could far exceed that of any large single drive.[3] [4] |
1989 | November 13 | Versioning | Continuous data protection, the technique of backing up computer data by automatically saving a copy of every change made to that data, is patented by British entrepreneur Pete Malcolm.[5] |
1990 | Possibly the earliest reference to the term "digital preservation" (to mean converting analog media to digital and preserving in digital form) is from this year.[6] | ||
1996 | January | Web archiving | The initial version of the command-line downloading program Wget, then known as Geturl, is released.[7] [8] |
1996 | Web archiving | The Internet Archive is founded by Brewster Kahle.[9] [10] | |
1996 | April | Web archiving | Alexa Internet is founded by Brewster Kahle.[11] Since this year, Alexa Internet has donated its crawl data to the Internet Archive.[12] |
1996 | Preserving Digital Information: Report of the Task Force on Archiving of Digital Information (Donald Waters, John Garrett, eds.) is published.[13] It became a fundamental document in the field of digital preservation that helped set out key concepts, requirements, and challenges.[14] [15] | ||
1997 | April 8 | Web archiving | cURL, a computer software project providing a library and command-line tool for transferring data using various protocols, releases its initial version of the tool. It is known at this point as HttpGet, would briefly rename itself to urlget, and would finally rename itself to cURL in March 1998. cURL can be used to download files over a network.[16] [17] |
1998 | May | Web archiving | The first version of HTTrack, a free and open source Web crawler and offline browser, is released.[18] |
2000 | The National Digital Information Infrastructure and Preservation Program (NDIIPP) launches.[19] | ||
2001 | October | Web archiving | The Wayback Machine is launched.[20] |
2001 | October 14 | Version 1.0 of the Parity Volume Set specification, used in Par1, is published.[21] | |
2002 | January | Web archiving | TinyURL, the first notable URL shortening service, is launched.[22] |
2003 | July | The International Internet Preservation Consortium is founded. | |
2005 | Cloud storage | Box is launched as Box.net.[23] [24] | |
2005 | April 7 | Versioning | The initial version of Git, a version control system with support for data integrity,[25] is released. |
2005 | April 29 | Web archiving | Safari version 2.0 introduces the ability to save complete websites using the proprietary WebArchive format (details at Safari version history).[26] |
2005 | August 1 | Physical storage | The article "Kryder's Law" is published The law observes that magnetic disk areal storage density has been increasing very quickly.[27] |
2005 | August | Versioning | Writely, a web-based word processor created by the software company Upstartle, launches.[28] [29] By January 2006, Writely would have support for revision history.[30] Upstartle would later be acquired by Google and Writely would be integrated into Google Docs. |
2005 | October 31 | File system | The first implementation of ZFS, a file system that includes protection against data corruption, is integrated into Solaris.[31] |
2006 | March 19 | Cloud storage | Amazon Web Services launches by releasing the Simple Storage Service (S3), intended for storing individual files (called objects) in a highly redundant and available fashion.[32] [33] S3 is designed for at least 99.999999999% durability (i.e., that percentage of objects is expected to survive after a year) and 99.99% availability (i.e., that percentage of objects is accessible at any given time).[34] The cost of S3 storage dropped over the next decade, reaching 2.3 cents a GB effective December 1, 2016.[35] S3 has been widely used by corporations, libraries, and governments to digitize data for long-term storage.[36] [37] [38] |
2007 | January 30 | Versioning | Microsoft Office 2007 is released. Word 2007 introduces the ability to track changes in documents.[39] |
2007 | June | Cloud storage | Dropbox is founded by MIT students Drew Houston and Arash Ferdowsi, as a startup company from the American seed accelerator Y Combinator.[40] |
2007 | September 21 | Physical storage | The initial version of Paperkey is released. Paperkey is a free software implementation of a paper key. It extracts the essential secret bytes from an OpenPGP private key, which can then be printed to paper.[41] |
2007 | October 26 | Versioning | Apple releases the initial version of Time Machine. |
2007 | Physical storage | Two software for densely storing information on paper are released: PaperBack[42] [43] and Twibright Labs' Optar.[44] [45] [46] | |
2007 | Federal Agencies Digital Guidelines Initiative (FADGI) | FADGI is a collaborative effort of 20 federal agencies to articulate common sustainable practices and guidelines for digitized and born digital historical, archival and cultural content. Two working groups study issues specific to two major areas, Still Image and Audio-Visual.[47] | |
2008 | Web archiving | The URL shortening service Bitly is launched.[48] | |
2008 | April 10 | Versioning | GitHub, a web-based Git repository hosting service, is launched. GitHub would popularize version control and Git. GitHub would also play an important role in encouraging people to make their source code freely available for posterity, allowing others to fork the code and acting as a de facto archive. In addition to software projects, GitHub would also be used to host code repositories for scientific research[49] [50] as well as for hosting and backing up websites and content. |
2008 | November 20 | Digitizing | The prototype for Europeana launches.[51] |
2009 | January 6 | Web archiving | The Archive Team begins operating.[52] [53] Its first big effort, for which it receives press coverage, is to download Geocities data before the service shuts down.[54] |
2009 | Web archiving | SocialSafe Ltd, the company responsible for developing SocialSafe, is founded.[55] | |
2009 | March 23 | File system | The initial version of Btrfs, a file system that supports checksums, incremental backups, and the ability to repair errors,[56] is released as part of the Linux kernel version 2.6.29.[57] [58] |
2009 | May 15 | Web archiving | The WARC file format is published as the standard ISO 28500:2009 1st edition.[59] |
2009 | October 26 | Web archiving | Yahoo! GeoCities, a web hosting service founded in 1994, closes its United States branch.[60] Various attempts at archiving GeoCities are made. The site would continue to be available only in Japan. |
2010 | April 14 | Web archiving | Twitter announces that it will donate its archive of public Tweets to the Library of Congress.[61] [62] |
2010 | December 1 | Web archiving | The Memento Project provides a standard for interoperability between web archives and the live web. Memento wins the Digital Preservation Award 2010 because "Memento offers an elegant and easily deployed method that reunites web archives with their home on the live web. It opens web archives to tens of millions of new users and signals a dramatic change in the way we use and perceive digital archives."[63] |
2011 | June 28 | Web archiving | Google Takeout is launched by the Google Data Liberation Front.[64] |
2012 | August 1 | File system | Microsoft introduces ReFS.[65] ReFS has a number of features related to digital preservation including integrity checking and data scrubbing, protection against data degradation, built-in handling of hard disk drive failure and redundancy, and integration of the RAID functionality. |
2012 | August 21 | Cloud storage | Amazon Web Services launches Amazon Glacier, an addition to its S3 offerings with lower storage costs than S3 (initially 1 cent per GB). Glacier is intended for long-term archival in cases where retrieval is rare; therefore retrieval is costly and slow. Glacier offers the same durability as the standard S3 offering.[66] [67] In December 2016, the price of Glacier is reduced to 0.4 cents per GB. Glacier has been used by governments, corporations, and libraries for low-cost long-term archival. It has also been recommended for use for personal backups when frequent access is not needed.[68] [69] |
2013 | April 6 | Web archiving | In the United Kingdom, the Legal Deposit Libraries (Non-Print Works) Regulations come into force, bringing digital and online material under the scope of the UK's legal deposit. Previously, the Legal Deposit Libraries Act 2003 had given the Secretary of State the powers to make regulations governing the deposit of non-print publications, but such regulations were never made at that time.[70] [71] |
2013 | April 18 | Digitizing | The Digital Public Library of America launches.[72] |
2013 | July 1 | Web archiving | Google Reader, an RSS/Atom feed aggregator operated by Google, shuts down after having launched in 2005.[73] The shutdown prompts an effort to archive the feed data from the service.[74] [75] |
2013 | December | Web archiving | The Memento Project is published as a standard in RFC 7089.[76] |
2017 | August | Web archiving | The WARC file format is published as the standard ISO 28500:2017 2nd edition.[77] |