We are just at the beginning stages of looking at our web site and trying
to capture the information and retain it in some cases, for long term
preservation. I understand that as in all things, we need to look at the
content and the retention period that applies to that content. There
are some questions which we are struggling with. If anyone has tackled
these successfully and has answer, I would appreciate hearing you:
We have an EDRMS. Are you using your EDRM system to store your web pages?
How are you storing them, as HTML, XML, PDF or as TIF's. If stored as
HTML, and the retention period for the document is 25 years, are you
convinced there will be a browser available through the years to open the
record? Is there a more stable format or way to store these?
If a report is posted to the website and changes are made to it, are all
changes kept? Are they versioned? As records staff provide direction and
feedback to web staff , is it common for an in-house webmaster to manage
the content and follow the retention schedule?
The managing of and determination of what is or isn't a record within the
web is a huge job. My staff are already quite spent in managing the day
to day record activities. As a result, do many of you store the whole web
content for convenience sake and keep the tape for the longest retention
period of the documents stored? (Don't beat me up on this one, I know it's
not ideal) If so, how often do you save it? How is it possible to
capture every little change that is made? Do you use software to help
manage this? If so, what do you use?
If any of you can suggest reading material on this, that would be great.
As always, thanks for any replies.
John Annunziello
Manager, Records and Information
Toronto and Region Conservation Authority
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"Information is a corporate, strategic asset that needs to be managed"
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