The costs of preserving research data
There’s a new report on the JISC website, authored by Neil Beagrie, Julia Chruszcz and Brian Lavoie. It looks at how much it costs to preserve research data and, perhaps as importantly, how institutions and others could calculate this. There are lots of reasons why this report is likely to have an impact - looking after research data is potentially costly, and yet it is important that - as a community - we make reasonable decisions about what should be preserved and how. Perhaps unsurprisingly (at least for those who already do this for a living), it seems the cost of ingesting the data forms the largest cost in the curation lifecycle, but at the same time the evidence shows that correcting badly ingested data later is even more costly, so the figures probably suggest that there is a positive cost/benefit calculation here. There is potential for developing the methodology here into a tool, and there could also be potential for some join-up with the Data Audit Framework.
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