Universal digital library
The concept of a universal digital library was described as "within reach" by a 2012 '' European Union Copyright Directive'' which told about Google's attempts to "mass-digitize" what are termed "orphan works" (i.e. out-of-print copyrighted works). The U.S. Copyright Office and the European Union Copyright law have been working on this. Google has reached agreements in France which "lets the publisher choose which works can be scanned or sold." By contrast, Google has been trying in the USA for a "free to digitize and sell any works unless the copyright holders opted out" deal and is still unsuccessful.Information repository
Attempts to develop what was called an ''information repository'' have been underway for decades: * In 1989, IBM tried to have OfficeVision combine mainframes and PCs to enable "an information repository." * In 2003, Microsoft introduced OneNote as an extension to Microsoft Office 2003; it would support "a personal information repository." * In 1996, an 1898-founded library obtained additional funding to expand its mission, and become a major "local resource center and regional information repository." The New York Times described them as "the second largest in the New York City region, second only to the New York Public Library on Fifth Avenue." Their services include "a computer information center devoted to outside-item requests."Federated information repository
A federated information repository is an easy way to deploy a secondary tier ofAutomated data management
Since one of the main reasons for the implementation of a federated information repository is to reduce the maintenance workload placed on IT staff by traditional data storage systems, federated information repositories are automated. Automation is accomplished via policies that can process data based on time, events, data age, and data content. Policies manage the following: *File system space management *Irrelevant data elimination (mp3, games, etc.) *Secondary storage resource management Data is processed according to media type, storage pool, and storage technology. Because federated information repositories are intended to reduce IT staff workload, they are designed to be easy to deploy and offer configuration flexibility, virtually limitless extensibility, redundancy, and reliable failover.Data recovery
Federated information repositories feature robust, client based data search and recovery capabilities that, based on permissions, enable end users to search the information repository, view information repository contents, including data on off-line media, and recover individual files or multiple files to either their original network computer or another network computer.References
{{DEFAULTSORT:Information Repository * Data management Data security Records management