Beyond the Boundaries of Open, Closed and Pirate Archives: Lessons from a Hybrid Approach
Prodromos Tsiavos (London School of Economics, UK), Petros, Stefaneas (National Technical University of Athens, Greece)

TL;DR
This paper explores the evolution of open digital archives, highlighting the shift towards hybrid models that balance openness with restrictions, driven by socio-economic factors and legal considerations.
Contribution
It analyzes the origins, characteristics, and stratification of open archives, emphasizing the practical necessity of hybrid approaches over pure open models.
Findings
Digital archives are increasingly stratified into open and restricted content.
Most current archiving processes incorporate elements of openness due to economic and organizational factors.
Hybrid open digital archives are a practical necessity despite the ideal of pure open archives.
Abstract
The creation of open archives i.e. archives where access is regulated by open licensing models (content, source, data), should be seen as part of a broader socio-economic phenomenon that finds legal expression in specific organizational and technical formats.This paper examines the origins and main characteristics of the open archives phenomenon. We investigate the extent to which different models of production of economic or social value can be expressed in different forms of licensing in the context of open archives. Through this process, we assess the extent to which the digital archive is moving towards providing access that is deeper (meaning, that offers more access rights) and wider (in the sense that most of the information given is in open content licensing) or face a gradual stratification and polarization of the content. Such stratification entails the emergence of two types…
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Taxonomy
TopicsDigital and Traditional Archives Management · Copyright and Intellectual Property · Cultural Insights and Digital Impacts
