Abstract

The current generation of web annotation technologies use a set of keying techniques, often based on the Document Object Model (DOM) for representing HTML content, that link an annotation to its target content. However, when the DOM structure changes, for any reason, or browser rendering engines parse the underlying source differently, annotations can be orphaned and incorrectly re-attached. This article explores the preservation strategies that are required to ensure the longevity of scholarly annotations that use such technologies. These recommendations range from the social changes needed for the perception of annotations as first-class scholarly objects through to the technological changes and infrastructures that are needed for the preservation of such objects. It concludes with a series of recommendations for changes in practice and infrastructure that work towards the digital preservation of DOM-node-keyed scholarly web annotations.

Highlights

  • Eve, Martin Paul (2017) Towards the digital preservation of Document Object Model (DOM)-nodekeyed scholarly web annotations

  • The current generation of annotation technologies uses a set of keying techniques, often based on the Document Object Model (DOM) for representing HTML content, that links an annotation to its target content

  • This article explores the preservation strategies that are required to ensure the longevity of scholarly annotations that use such technologies. These recommendations range from the social changes needed for the perception of annotations as first-class scholarly objects through to the technological changes and infrastructures that are needed for the preservation of such objects. It concludes with a series of recommendations for changes in practice and infrastructure that work towards the digital preservation of DOM-node-keyed scholarly web annotations

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Summary

Martin Paul Eve

This article explores the preservation strategies that are required to ensure the longevity of scholarly annotations that use such technologies. These recommendations range from the social changes needed for the perception of annotations as first-class scholarly objects through to the technological changes and infrastructures that are needed for the preservation of such objects. It concludes with a series of recommendations for changes in practice and infrastructure that work towards the digital preservation of DOM-node-keyed scholarly web annotations

IMPLICATIONS FOR PRACTICE
JL SC
UNDERSTANDING ANNOTATION TECHNOLOGIES AND THE DOCUMENT OBJECT MODEL
THE SOCIAL CONTEXTS FOR THE PRESERVATION OF SCHOLARLY ANNOTATIONS
THE TECHNOLOGICAL DIFFICULTIES OF PRESERVING SCHOLARLY ANNOTATIONS
INFRASTRUCTURAL CHANGES AND PROVISIONS
Full Text
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