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The ECHO DEPository Project
The ECHO DEPository is a 3-year (2004-2007) digital preservation research and development project at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign in partnership with OCLC and funded by the Library of Congress under their National Digital Information Infrastructure Preservation Program (NDIIPP). Other project partners include NCSA, WILL TV and Radio, Tufts University, Michigan State University, and state libraries from Arizona, Connecticut, Illinois, North Carolina, and Wisconsin.

What is the digital preservation problem?

The Library of Congress sums up the problem this way:

Information is being produced in greater quantities and with greater frequency than at any time in history. Electronic media, especially the Internet, make it possible for almost anyone to become a "publisher." How will society preserve this information and make it available to future generations? How will libraries and other repositories classify this information so that their patrons can find it with the same ease that they can locate a book on a shelf?

The ease with which electronic information can be created and "published" makes much of what is available today, gone tomorrow. Thus there is an urgent need to preserve this information before it is forever lost.

http://www.digitalpreservation.gov/

The ECHO DEPository project pulls together several streams of activities aimed at helping to answer the question of how digital resources will be identified, archived and preserved for the future. These activities include the development of new tools for selecting and capturing materials published on the Web, the evaluation of existing tools for storing and accessing digital objects, and research into the challenges of maintaining archived digital resources into the future.

This Web site provides additional information about these activities and about the project partners, and, as the project moves ahead, will be used to share our findings.

If you have any questions, please contact Janet Eke, Project Coordinator via email at or phone 217-333-4701.