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We received an interesting e mail from a CNN archivist in Atlanta who stated their utter disbelief at the notion that BBC has lost any of their 9/11 archives.
"I'm an archivist with the CNN News Library in Atlanta, and I can tell you with absolute certainty, the mere idea that news agencies such as ours would "misplace" any airchecks from 9/11 is preposterous. CNN has these tapes locked away from all the others. People like myself, who normally would have access to any tapes in our library, must ask special permission in order to view airchecks from that day. Multiple tapes would have been recording their broadcast that day, and there are also private agencies that record all broadcasts from all channels - constantly - in the event that a news agency missed something or needs something. They don't just have one copy... they have several. It's standard procedure, and as soon as the second plane hit, they would start recording several copies on other tapes machines all day long."
"The only information they need to give out is the source of the collapse claim. No one is saying the BBC is "part of the conspiracy," we're saying that someone gave that reporter the information ahead of time. The source of that information is the only thing they can reveal that would be meaningful."
The following components to be retained:-
· Two broadcast standard copies of all transmitted/published TV, Radio and BBCi output – one to be stored on a separate site as a master
· One browse-quality version for research purposes, to protect the broadcast material
· All supporting metadata to enable research and re-use
· A selection of original (i.e. unedited) material for re-use/re-versioning purposes
· Hardware/software/equipment to enable replay/transfer of the media
01-02
A retention schedule for each set of records kept /archived must be created as defined in the Core Records Policy. Retention periods are set according to the status and value of the record
01-03
A risk assessment must be carried out for all data being kept / archived
01-04
All records identified within the BBCs Core Records Retention Schedule must be retained, and it is the responsibility of the area that has been identified as holders of the master copy to ensure they are stored in an appropriate storage mechanism, and for the agreed period of time.
01-05
It is the responsibility of the person who thinks they are holding Core Records to add their records to the BBC Core Records Retention Schedule.
01-06
Non-core records that are to be retained longer than 2 years must be authorised, and be registered with Information and Archives as part of the Retention Schedule - see Appendix A.1 of the Core Records Policy
01-07
Non-core records that are not authorised, and therefore not registered, must be destroyed in an appropriate manner within 2 years.
02
Access
02-01
All media content must be available for use by other BBC departments when it has been broadcast/published. The only exceptions to this will be content which has been restricted for legal or editorial reasons. All valid restrictions on use should be notified to the Sound Archivist, Television Archivist or New Media Archivist as appropriate
02-02
Wherever possible copies will be made available for loan, but original Television and Radio programme masters will be issued for broadcast requirements
02-03
All loans of Radio and Television archive material will be for two weeks. Renewals will be possible, but overdue items will be subject to a fine. This will improve the security of the archive and ensure access to the BBC’s prime assets - its programme content.
03
Storage Requirements
03-01
All media and metadata must be stored securely in the correct conditions to minimise damage and degradation, following industry best practice
04
Archiving
04-01
All transmitted/published media content will be kept for at least five years to fulfil legal requirements and to enable re-versioning and re-use
04-02
All original (unedited) media content will be kept for at least one year. A selection of material with high re-use value (e.g. stock footage/audio) will be kept for five years
04-03
An initial decision about long term archiving must be made at the point content is created. This will be reviewed after one and five years.
04-04
The appropriate metadata relating to broadcast/published content must be kept for ever as a permanent record of what the BBC created
05
Preservation
05-01
An ongoing preservation schedule will be maintained to transfer media content which is in danger of degrading or only exists on obsolete formats. Only content with high research/re-use/heritage value will be preserved.
06
Digitisation
06-01
Content being preserved will also be digitised to enable access at the desktop and reuse in future media asset management systems. Material which has not been identified for preservation will be digitised on demand if it has been selected for broadcast or publication on a website.
07
Disposal
07-01
Media content which falls outside the selection criteria must be disposed of after the agreed retention period in order to maximise analogue and digital storage space. In the first instance it will be offered back to Production to store and manage. If Production have no requirement to retain it, or there is no response within one month, it will be offered to BBC Worldwide and Rights, then to the appropriate external archives (e.g. British Film Institute, National Sound Archive). If there is no taker, the material will be destroyed to prevent misuse. In some cases (e.g. stills) material may be offered for sale.
In all cases a record will be kept for ever which documents the disposal/destruction process.
Sweejak wrote:I posted yesterday, it's still not up.
orz wrote:Seems they were part of a beta-test version of a TV news archive, and they claim it was for technical reasons rather than censorship. I believe them; they don't have a history of censorship, have all sorts of stuff of all political persuasions hosted there, and generally seem like a good organisation genuinely dedicated to sharing and archiving media.
This is like a
reporter doing a live feed from
Dealy Plaza saying Kennedy has
been shot as JFK drives by in his
limo waving to the crowd...
Does anybody still think that Silverstein's "Pull it" was referring to pulling the firefighters or
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