The nature of our age demands that the Catholic Church produces documents, and communicates, digitally, more and more every year. So far, however, very little attention has been paid to whether the usual, mainstream tools that many others already use are, indeed, technically suitable for the Church. Or if mainstream legal formulas and licenses are the most effective ones. These slides of mine from 2013 address all these issues.
1. Marco Fioretti (marco@digifreedom.net) 2013/04/04 St. Thomas School of Law
http://mfioretti.com Minneapolis
http://stop.zona-m.net Some Rights Reserved
The Church in the age of Digital Formats
New possibilities,
New responsibilities
by Marco Fioretti
http://mfioretti.com
2. Introduction
Basic concepts and definitions
Some examples of Format Wars
Paper or bits? Pros and cons of digital archives
Characteristics of open file formats
Implications for the Church
Conclusions/Questions
Agenda
3. Marco Fioretti
Freelance writer, activist and teacher about open digital standards, Free
Software, digital technologies and the their relations and impact on education,
ethics, civil rights and environmental issues
Member of: Eleutheros (www.eleutheros.org)
OpenDocument Fellowship
Digistan.org
RULE Project
Author introduction
4. The nature of our age demands that the Catholic Church produces
documents, and communicates digitally, more and more every year
Formats and software are a crucial part of the message in digital
communications.
Is the Church prepared to handle them, in order to spread and
preserve Her message in the most effective way?
Why is this a problem?
What are the consequences of ignoring it?
Is this a technical or ethical problem? In other words, who should
decide how to proceed?
Problem Definition
5. What are file formats?
Why are they important?
How do they support (or limit) the way we all learn,
cooperate and work?
The answer starts right here in Pisa... four centuries ago!
Introduction to File Formats
6. Basic concepts and definitions
Q: How do we create, access and preserve information?
A: Thanks to three very different things:
Physical Support: the material object containing the information
Data Format: the rules by which the information is encoded on the support
User Interface: the tools used to write and read the data according to the format
almost always, Support, Format and Interface can (and should) be
independent from each other
7. Support, Format, Interface: non electronic example
Interface
+
Any manual writing instrument
(don't forget quill and charcoal!)
and your eye!
Format
Hyeroglyphs (which could also
be written on paper, papyrus,
wood...) and the meanings
associated to each gliph
Support
The Rosetta
Stone,
II Century BC
8. Support, Format, Interface: analog electronic example
Support Format
Support and format are mixed here: Photograms can only
be impressed on a specific type of tape, in a way not usable
with other cameras and projectors
Interface
Camera and Projector that are
useless with any other tape
NOTE: this is the very popular Super 8mm home movie format, released on the market in
1965 by Eastman Kodak, not widely used since the 1980's
9. Support, Format, Interface: digital, finally!
Support
Hard drives, floppies, CD
ROMs, DVDs, Compact
Flash drives... usable with
different hardware
They all contain the same
bits that can represent
wildly different types of
information: text, images,
audio...
Format
CHARACTER ENCODING:
the meaning associated to each bit
sequence:
EX: “01000001” means “A”
FILE FORMAT:
how each piece of data can and
must be stored and marked:
<style:properties style:columnwidth="1.785cm"/>
...
<table:table
cell><text:p>600000</text:p></table:tablecell>
+
Interface
Any software program aware of
the file format, regardless of :
the hardware it runs on: x86 or Apple
computer, cell phone, DVD player,
remote server...
Its license of use
10. Why is digital information good?
If all conceivable
kinds of
information (from
texts to music,
images and 3D
models) can be
represented as a
series of bits
We only need:
ONE class of generic storage devices: bit containers which can change shape and technology
without particular problems and are very cheap
ONE (ok, very large...) class of telecom networks, ie bit transporters
And all these data can be preserved or distributed with much less money, time and effort than before!
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11. Why is digital information bad?
If all conceivable kinds of information (from texts to music, images and 3D models) can be represented as
bits sequences stored in bits containers, we have (at least) two big problems:
Bit containers are much more fragile than non-digital media: parchment lasts millennia, hard drives a few
years
This problem has a relatively easy solution (make many copies of information, refresh them
frequently) and is outside the scope of this seminar
The second problem is that, even when the container works perfectly, the sequences of bits are absolutely
useless if they are locked and we lose the key and cannot buy one:
W
ork
Culture
Private
life
Public
data
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12. If file formats are mismanaged...
They waste huge amounts of public money and damage public culture,
services and education as well as our private lives
BUT:
unlike pension systems, health care, public education or
transportation, it has a solution which is much quicker and cheaper to
define and implement, so it makes much less sense to wait.
13. Food for thought
Technology is legislation (uncertain source)
Open formats make history - and maintain it (G. Markham)
If computer programs are pens, then think of file formats as alphabets: pens
can be patented without real damage to culture and society; alphabets must
stay open
16. “Due to ever-shifting platforms and file formats, much of the data we produce today could eventually
fall into a black hole of inaccessibility.”
How much data? “at last count, 369 exabytes worth of data, including electronic records, tax files, e-
mail, music and photos, for starters. (An exabyte is 1 quintillion bytes; a quintillion is the number 1
followed by 18 zeroes.)”
Losing these data would be like burning money “because we would lose the huge economic
investment [governments], libraries and archives have made digitizing materials to make them
accessible”
“Software companies have seen the benefits of locking people into a platform and have been very
resistant to change”
Source: interview to Jerome P. McDonough, assistant professor in the Graduate School of Library and
Information Science at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, October 2008
(http://news.illinois.edu/news/08/1027data.html)
Format wars 2008: the most expensive (digital) Black Hole
18. Format wars: can you read your own e-books?
Being forced to worry about
compatibility between a book and your
way to read it is like having to worry if
the paper books on your bookshelf will
still be readable if you change your brand
of glasses
The Amazon Kindle and Sony e-book readers
Does it make sense to risk such limitations for digital editions
of the Bible?
19. How much time does an organization have to detect and fix any format-
related problem that may cause data loss?
Until now, even if many people don't realize it, this time has been
scarily short:
““Digital information lasts forever—or five years, whichever
comes first”
(Jeff Rothenberg, 1995, in “Ensuring the Longevity of Digital
Information”,www.clir.org/pubs/archives/ensuring.pdf)
How long is “long enough”?
20. Can the Church tolerate to live in such a situation?
Can Holy Scriptures, Encyclicals and similar documents be still
limited to paper, or risk to be lost so soon?
Luckily, this is NOT a law of nature. Most loss of digital
documents so far has been caused by simple ignorance
How long should Church documents last?
21. Software may be copied for free. Computers cannot
File in .docx format = file that only people with computer
new/powerful enough to run .docx compatible software can read
Bible.docx = Bible for rich/lucky people only?
(no, not really, but you get the idea)
(repeat for video
Why should the Church create such obstacles to Her own mission?
File formats and the poor: the greatest digital divide?
23. Deciding whether future believers, or poor people
of today, should lose access to Church doctrine
and other documents without real, serious reasons
is an ethical decision
It must not be ignored, or delegated to technicians
Do NOT delegate!
24. Demand exclusive usage of really Open formats (eg OpenDocument for
office files)
Demand strategies for migrations of document management
infrastructures to open formats and software platforms
Never, ever lock yourself to specific hardware
To know more:
Read the Eleutheros Manifesto at www.eleutheros.org
visit http://mfioretti.com, or email marco@digifreedom.net
Practical solutions and guidelines