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Perma’s Webby

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While it may be old news that Perma.cc won a 2015 Webby Award for Websites in Law, the trophy arrived in the mail today, and it put a spring in everyone’s step.

She’s a beauty!

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Brotherly Love and Perpetual Links

Perma.cc was lucky enough to hitch a ride on the Legal Information Preservation Alliance (LIPA) table at AALL this past weekend in Philadelphia, and what a ride it was!

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                                                                                                                                                                                                                             (photo: @kylekcourtney)

 1 Terry Gross Sighting

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2 Days

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Director of the Harvard Library Innovation Lab, Kim Dulin showcases Perma.cc at the Annual LIPA meeting.

11 New Registrars

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Indelible Cheesesteaks

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Big thank you to LIPA for sharing space with Perma.cc and all your continuing support, see you all next year in Chicago!

New Version .52

Yesterday, Perma was upgraded to version .52, which includes a new greeting and signup page for libraries, improvements to archival playback, mirror logic refactoring, a new FAQ, fresh user Docs, and a faster admin console. Bravo!

The Perma Dev Team will continue to improve functionality and fix bugs, while the same easy archival features you have come to expect will always be available.

Swag at AALL

There will be Perma.cc stickers, Sharpies, and USB power supplies at our table at AALL, do come by and see us! Table 717, Sunday-Monday.

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Perma.cc and The Bluebook

It is with great joy and fanfare that we announce the inclusion of Perma citations in the newest version The Bluebook!

Cross-posted from Et Seq., The Harvard Law School Library Blog:

http://etseq.law.harvard.edu/2015/06/20th-edition-of-the-bluebook-including-perma-cc/

“The 20th Edition of The Bluebook is now available and includes a new rule: 18.2.1(d), which states:

‘Archiving of Internet sources is encouraged, but only when a reliable archival tool is available.  For citations to Internet sources, append the archive URL to the full citation in brackets” – the rule includes the following example:

Letter from Rose M. Oswald Poels, President/CEO, Wis. Bankers Ass’n, to Elizabeth M. Murphy, Sec’y, SEC (Sept. 17, 2013), http://www.sec.gov/comments/s7-03-13/s70313-178.pdf http://perma.cc/B7Z7D9DJ].

Perma.cc is also the example used to demonstrate the archived sources rule in the Rule 18.1 Basic Citation Forms for Internet Sources table on page 178:

Rocio Gonzalez, Puerto Rico’s Status Debate Continues as Island Marks 61 Years as a Commonwealth, Huffington Post (July 25, 2013, 9:00 AM),http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/07/25/puerto-rico-status-debate_n_3651755.html http://perma.cc/C6UP-96HN].'”

A big thank you to everyone at The Bluebook for recognizing the problem of link rot and recommending Perma.cc as a reliable tool for stamping it out!

 

100 Registrars

The Perma.cc team is pleased to announce that we’ve added the 100th registrar to our perpetual archiving system!

With more courts, libraries, and schools participating everyday, Perma is growing faster than ever.

We’d like to recognize our 8 most active Registrars who are leading the way in archiving: Columbia, University of Texas, William & Mary, Boston College, Vanderbilt, Boston University, Northwestern, and Indiana — thank you for helping to stomp out link rot!

Perma.cc at AALL

Perma.cc will be at the upcoming American Association of Law Libraries annual meeting in Philadelphia, singing the gospel of perpetual content and rot-proof links.

We will be sharing a table with our friends at LIPA on Sunday and Monday, July 19 and 20. Be sure to find us for some great Perma swag at table 717!

How Can Faculty Use Perma.cc?

In an effort to continue my Reporting from the Field series, I’d like to address a question that’s becoming more common as Perma.cc expands beyond the legal environment: How Can Faculty Use Perma.cc?

For those of us in law school libraries, the concept of journals using Perma.cc makes a lot of sense – law journal publishing is a student-run enterprise, and as part of that process, student editors check citations for accuracy and format, presenting a perfect opportunity to create and vest Perma links.  Using this example, the law school library is the Registrar, the law journal is the Vesting Organization, and the student editors are the Vesting Users.

Law journals, however, are not the only entities at a law school engaged in non-commercial publishing.  Clinics produce white papers or reports, faculty maintain blogs, librarians create research guides – much of this work includes citations and relies on online content, presenting additional opportunities to create and vest Perma links.  Moving beyond the legal context, there are even more opportunities for faculty and academic affiliates to engage with Perma, so how can faculty use Perma.cc?

One option that has been adopted by several Registrars is to make a Vesting Org under the name of a particular faculty member.  The potential list of Vesting Users affiliated with that Vesting Org would include the faculty member, a faculty assistant, and research assistants.  We can imagine that if the library at Xavier’s School for Gifted Youngsters is a Registrar, with Ororo Munroe serving as Registrar User, she could create a Vesting Org for the “X-Men Law Review,” but she could also create a Vesting Org called “Professor X” with Professor X, his assistant Hank McCoy, and any number of research assistants as Vesting Users.  Since any Vesting User can add other Vesting Users within the Vesting Org, Professor X could task Hank with adding or removing members from the Vesting Org as they join or leave the school.

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Another option is to create a general Vesting Organization for a group of similarly situated faculty members affiliated with the Registrar.  We can imagine that if the library at Shield headquarters is a Registrar, with Nick Fury serving as Registrar User, he could create a Vesting Org for “The Avengers” with each of the members of the team as Vesting Users.  Then in the shared folder, he could create subfolders for Tony Stark, Steve Rodgers, Bruce Banner, and Natasha Romanova.  Remember that all links vested by the Vesting Users in this organization would be viewable by the other Vesting Users, which would be great if Bruce Banner and Tony Stark were working to publish a paper together, but could present a problem if Steve Rodgers would prefer to keep the vested links associated with his writings private.  This setup may work best in a small institution where the Registrar User wants to play a larger role and the number of Vesting Users is kept relatively low.

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In my attempt to not further anger Marvel purists, I’ll end the analogies there, but if you have any other ideas for how to help faculty members use Perma.cc or any thoughts about the relationship between Vesting Users, Vesting Orgs, Registrar Users and Registrars, share your thoughts – together we can set up some workable best practices and keep Perma.cc growing!

Welcome New Library Partners: WVU and Berkeley!

The Perma.cc team is thrilled to welcome two new law library partners:

We’re now at 75 total library partners! And collectively we’re supporting the efforts of over 200 journals, courts and other vesting organizations.

Not too shabby.

Web Archiving and Perma.cc in the New Yorker

The current issue of The New Yorker includes a terrific piece by Jill Lepore on the many exciting developments and challenges in the field of web archiving.

Lepore details the wonderful, pioneering work by Brewster Kahle and our friends at Internet Archive, as well as Herbert Van de Sompel  and the Memento team. She also describes the impact Perma.cc aims to make in the world of law reviews and court decisions:

[Perma] was developed by the Harvard Library Innovation Lab, and its founding supporters included more than sixty law-school libraries, along with the Harvard Berkman Center for Internet and Society, the Internet Archive, the Legal Information Preservation Alliance, and the Digital Public Library of America. Perma.cc promises “to create citation links that will never break.” It works something like the Wayback Machine’s “Save Page Now.” If you’re writing a scholarly paper and want to use a link in your footnotes, you can create an archived version of the page you’re linking to, a “permalink,” and anyone later reading your footnotes will, when clicking on that link, be brought to the permanently archived version. Perma.cc has already been adopted by law reviews and state courts; it’s only a matter of time before it’s universally adopted as the standard in legal, scientific, and scholarly citation.

We couldn’t agree more!

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