Things I am thinking about in the context of our football images (as it relates to alternate resources):
- If the images are placed on Flickr, or if our client decides to make a Facebook group or twitter account for the images, they would be able to back up those accounts using some of the services I have blogged about earlier.
- The Archive-It website could be useful to our client. They would be the organization and then have multiple collections backed up, with the football image collection being one of them. The football image website is what would be archived.
- How would these images be used? I’m guessing mainly Alabama football fans will be the ones looking at these images. And if there is a Facebook group or blog on these images, fans will want to look at that as well.
Other things I am thinking about in regards to alternate resources:
- I still haven’t found anything on how to archive TV content or oral histories. The services I blogged about all have to do with social media.
- Gretchen (in one of the comments) brought up a good point on legal rights and moral rights when dealing with privacy and social media. Those pesky terms and polices!
- And who is supposed to be archiving social media anyways? Institutions or individuals?
- I can see the research potential of social media, in that for historians it would be like looking at journals or day books, to see the day to day life of ordinary citizens. But twitter and Facebook are a new technology, and most of the users are still alive. So again, privacy issues.
What does everyone else think?