Co-creating Flickr’s 100-year plan In partnership with the Flickr Foundation, researchers at the Oxford Internet Institute (OII) co-created a one-day workshop to establish principles for designing infrastructure that can preserve Flickr’s digital photographic collection of 50 billion images for the next 100 years.
Digital archives and artefacts are invaluable cultural assets. Without adequate preservation, they risk becoming lost, corrupted, or inaccessible over time. For Flickr, an online photo and video-sharing platform, there is a pressing need to develop new ways to preserve its unique collections. These span everything from family photographs to images documenting internationally significant events. In collaboration with partners across the globe, Flickr is co-creating a 100-year plan to ensure its collection remains accessible and intact for several generations.
Professor Kathryn Eccles
Hosted at the OII, the Oxford workshop brought together a diverse set of voices with 18 attendees from across the academic, arts and heritage sectors. The event was led by Flickr Foundation Founder George Oates alongside Professor Kathryn Eccles and two DPhil students, Amanda Curtis and Fattori McKenna, from the OII. Using a flexible co-design methodology, the workshop enabled a rapid, iterative process of idea generation. The group considered the big questions and challenges facing Flickr, such as who will maintain the archive, and how it can be future-proofed as technology evolves. The group explored several potential solutions by applying their academic knowledge and insights in ways that uphold the cultural, social and environmental ethics of digital storage.
In addition to arriving at valuable insights in partnership with Flickr, helping to craft its century-long plan, the workshop developed a set of shared principles and strategies to enhance the accessibility and usability of digital archives in the long term. Collaborations with Flickr continue, including an internship where Fattori McKenna is working as Lead Researcher on Flickr’s Data Lifeboat project.
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