New White Paper from the BitCurator Team on Putting Digital Forensics into Practice in Collecting Institutions

The BitCurator team is pleased to announce the availability of the BitCurator Phase I white paper, From Bitstreams to Heritage: Putting Digital Forensics into Practice in Collecting Institutions. The press release announcing the white paper can be read below and also on the SILS website at: http://sils.unc.edu/news/2013/bitcurator-white-paper

From Bitstreams to Heritage: Putting Digital Forensics into Practice in Collecting Institutions

Out of the blue, an archivist gets a call from the husband of a famous scientist who has recently passed away. He wants to donate materials to the archives that can help people to understand and learn about her research. The archivist visits their home and is handed a cardboard box. Inside are not sheets of paper but a stack of floppy disks, CDs, Zip disks and a hard drive. What’s the archivist to do?

Researchers at the School of Information and Library Science (SILS) at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, and the Maryland Institute for Technology in the Humanities (MITH) at the University of Maryland are investigating methods and developing tools for these sorts of situations.

A new white paper titled, “From Bitstreams to Heritage: Putting Digital Forensics into Practice in Collecting Institutions” examines the application of digital forensics methods to materials in collecting institutions – particularly libraries, archives and museums. It is a product of the BitCurator project and is written by Drs. Christopher A. Lee, Frances Carroll McColl Term Professor and research associate, Kam Woods of SILS; Matthew Kirschenbaum, associate director of MITH; and SILS doctoral student Alexandra Chassanoff.

”The landscape has changed quite dramatically in the past few years,” said Lee. “The white paper reflects a great deal of energy and progress around the work of extracting, securing and describing information that’s been stored on computer disks and drives.”

The BitCurator project, funded by the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, is “an effort to build, test and analyze systems and software for incorporating digital forensics methods into the workflows of a variety of collecting institutions.” Procedures and tools for acquiring and validating data from physical media are well established in the field of digital forensics. There is a rich and growing body of open source tools that can be used to process, manage and disseminate forensically acquired data. While the primary target for many of these tools and methods is the law enforcement community, there is great potential for connecting these two streams of activity in order to support the work of collecting institutions.

BitCurator is developing and disseminating a dedicated open-source software environment that can be used to apply digital forensics methods to collections. The software and associated guidance documents are freely available on our Release page: https://github.com/BitCurator/bitcurator-distro/wiki/Releases

According to the white paper, “Forensic methods identify, capture and retain various forms of contextual information, which can be vital for users making meaningful use of digital materials.” It explains those processes, along with many associated challenges and opportunities

“BitCurator now moves into a critical next phase, with a full-time dedicated Community Lead based at MITH whose mandate is outreach to collecting institutions,” said Kirschenbaum. “We look forward to working with a wide variety of archives, special collections, museums and other constituencies to create a robust user community around our platform.”

The white paper is now available at: https://bitcurator.net/wp-content/uploads/sites/1099/2018/08/bitstreams-to-heritage.pdf

Cal Lee on WREK Atanta’s “Lost in the Stacks” Radio Show and Podcast

Listen to BitCurator PI Cal Lee address the need for digital preservation on WREK Atlanta’s “Lost in the Stacks” radio show and podcast, the “one-and-only research-library rock’n’roll radio show!” Cal addresses the long-term sustainability of digital media, various approaches to digital preservation, and the aims of the BitCurator project–all while surrounded by an eclectic radio mix of songs dealing with “Bad luck and trouble.”

Listen here: http://lostinthestacks.libsyn.com/bit-rot  (Click on the “POD” button).

Announcing the BitCurator Webinar Series

We are happy to announce the first in our BitCurator webinar series: An Introduction to the BitCurator Environment. This webinar will be the first in a monthly series of webinars addressing the use of Digital Forensics in the curation of born-digital materials. It will take place on Wednesday, November 20th from 10:00am – 11:00am EST and again from 2:oopm – 3:00pm EST. We will introduce participants to the basic functions of the BitCurator environment–from installation to generating forensics metadata reports. Specific topics covered will include:

  • Installing BitCurator as either a virtual machine or a stand-alone operating system
  • Learning to navigate within the BitCurator environment (BitCurator is a modified version of Ubuntu Linux)
  • Working with external media within BitCurator
  • Creating disk images via Guymager
  • Searching a disk image for personally identifiable information (PII)
  • An introduction to DFXML (Digital Forensics XML)
  • Generating the BitCurator reports

To attend this webinar, please register here in advance for the session you would like to attend by clicking on the appropriate link below.

Session One beginning at 10:00am EST

Session Two beginning at 2:00pm PST

We are limiting each webinar to 30 participants, so we encourage you to register early.  If you have any questions about the event, please contact Porter Olsen at polsen at umd dot edu.