Recently, I was introduced to TEDtalks and I came across a library related podcast called "What we learned from 5 million books".
After four years of research, Harvard’s Erez Leiberman Aiden
and Jean-Baptiste Michel states that a picture isn’t worth a 1000 words. It is
worth 500 billion words. To understand human culture in which we have changed the way
we use words and record them from the past to the present; one would read a lot
of books but it isn’t very practical. Google’s Digitalisation project on the
other hand has made it very practical and easier to find the information (specifically
words and phrases) that you are looking for in the click of a button.
This made me think about:
How does Google’s Digitalisation project affect modern day
libraries?
In modern times, libraries have to be able to provide the
best service to users which would mean having the most convenient access to
information anywhere in the world, which is regularly updated and available
24hours 7 days a week. Clearly the best answer would be the internet! It allows the preservation of large library archives, where
physical space to store them in running out and the risk of damage by fire or
flooding is reduced significantly. This was one of the reasons why the Google
Print Library would set up in 2004, to store large in-house libraries whether
it is manuscripts, books, journals etc from 5 different US universities.
The
internet has become a necessity to keeping libraries alive, simply because the
cost to run them has greatly increased over the years which have had a knock on effect on the amount of qualified librarian hired to run them. Not to mention
due to the value of the printed resources, the amount of security needed to
ensure the safety of priceless one-time items.However, for anyone dealing with digitalisation you would have
to quote the disadvantage of copyrights law and issues related to digital information
security and confidentiality. One would say that they are public records so
there shouldn’t be any problems, but what happens when a non-subscriber to
digitalized information acquires a copy? How does this affect future
negotiations with authors?
Furthermore, one has to think of the managerial and
financial issues related to libraries and technology. A lot of libraries have
been stuck in their ways about not modernising and refuse to adopt
digitalisation. That is all well and good for libraries that have good budgets,
government funding and great sponsors. However, the libraries that don’t have
such support, they need to be able to adapt while still retaining managerial
control over licensing and policy making. This is where E-libraries have
developed, as you do not need a lot of technical support and can be updated
regularly at the speed in which collections are acquired. Donations can be used
as a method to constantly fund them without digging into the day-to-day funding
of primary activities.
This completely, disputes statements that librarians become
useless with digitalisation as it takes a continuous team effect to update the
online library around daily activities. Furthermore, this also improves
librarians IT skills for further development in content management systems. Thus,
improving upon the delivery and means to which information is available in the
coming future.
I am curious however, to know what others think about this
subject in terms of pros and cons of digitalisation on modern day libraries.