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Strength in Numbers: IFLA Joins Our Future Memory + Future Knowledge Podcast Episode

Building on the momentum of our Our Future Memory campaign, we’re thrilled to share two major developments:

🌍 IFLA Joins the Statement

This week, the International Federation of Library Associations and Institutions (IFLA) formally endorsed the Four Rights for Memory Institutions statement, further uniting libraries, archives, and museums worldwide behind the call to:

  • Collect digital materials
  • Preserve digital collections
  • Provide controlled digital access
  • Cooperate across institutions

With IFLA’s global reach—representing over 1.5 million library professionals across more than 150 countries—this endorsement underscores the universal urgency of protecting cultural heritage in the digital age.

🎙️ “Future Knowledge” Podcast Episode

To dive deeper into what this global alignment means in practice, Internet Archive has released a special episode of the Future Knowledge podcast featuring voices from across our movement:

Together, they reflect on the rapid growth of our campaign—from its launch in Aruba through widespread European and global sign-ons—and explore concrete next steps for policymakers, memory institutions, and library advocates worldwide.

💬 Voices from the Movement

📚 Libraries in the Digital Age: Keep the Rights, Evolve the Tools

Brewster Kahle issued a powerful reminder that the mission of libraries doesn’t change just because the medium does:

“We should not lose rights that we had in the physical world as we move digital. It should be a better future.”

“What libraries have always done—preserve, lend, interoperate—is now being challenged.”

He emphasized that in the face of licensing restrictions and eroding control, the very identity of libraries is at stake.

🧰 Let Libraries Be Libraries

Lila Bailey recounted the genesis of the four digital rights and how librarians globally came together in a moment of existential reflection:

“Everybody deserves access to high quality information that libraries and other memory institutions have been collecting for generations.”

She reminded listeners why the call to action is urgent:

“Winter is coming…Winter’s kind of here when we’re thinking about access to information.”

🇷🇸 From Belgrade to the World: A Simple Document, a Global Movement

Adam Sofronijević shared the emotional core of the campaign:

“Let this world not be our doom, but our hope. By preserving our rights… we will be able to expand all those beautiful things that digital tools are promising us.”

“When winter comes, the temperature falls down. What we can do is huddle together to give us more warmth.”

His message: the power of unity and simplicity in a world bracing for digital disruption.

🇪🇺 Digital Fairness for Libraries: A European Call to Action

Caroline De Cock called out the quiet crisis in how memory institutions are being hollowed out by licensing regimes:

“We are shifting to a model where [libraries] are basically seeing their collections disappear. Like Snapchat stories.”

At the LIBER Conference, she found a community ready to act:

“Memory institutions are facing a situation that has never been more critical in terms of being able to fulfill their mission in the future.”

And she pointed to Europe’s unique role in protecting digital rights:

“Europe has a tradition of trying to protect the little guy. We are into that—that’s our thing.”

📖 The Global Voice of Libraries

Stephen Wyber spoke to the power of collective voice and institutional alignment in the face of digital challenges and the nearly hundred year of IFLA advocacy on these matters:

“What we’ve really seen is a deregulation by stealth: quietly, little bit by bit, all of the protections, all of the balancing factors that were in place have been undermined.”

“The importance of talking about rights: (…) things that are as important as the preservation of our history, access to information for accountability for reproducibility, when we’re talking about access for research, for education, it’s crazy that we should call these exceptions. These should be the rule!”.

🌴 Preserving a Nation’s Memory—Digitally

Peter Scholing reflected on the foundational partnership that launched the campaign and why small nations play a big role in preserving digital heritage:

“There’s a shared purpose in getting the information you want to share out there, and there’s a lot of barriers to information (…) So it’s just our way of contributing to that conversation and sharing with worlds that we’re about sharing the information.”

Raymond Hernandez added:

“By putting this together in the collection, we can make it possible not only for us Arubians to get this information but also for all our diaspora living around the world. (…) the signing was a kind of expression that it is not only about cultural equity but also about making sure our communities are not left out of the digital future.”

🌍 What’s Next: From Signing to Sustaining a Movement

Closing thoughts from Adam and Caroline made it clear: this isn’t just a petition. It’s a catalyst.

“This campaign is a merger of the best America and Europe can provide to each other.”

Adam Sofronijević

“This is not just signing a statement. I’m hoping this is kick-starting a movement.”

Caroline De Cock

📢 Join the Movement

▶️ Listen now on your favorite podcast platform to hear firsthand how these leaders plan to translate collective commitment into legal protections and community action.

Stay tuned for more updates—and if your institution hasn’t signed yet, visit ourfuturememory.org to add your voice.

We’re stronger together, and the future of our shared memory depends on it.

Strength in Numbers: IFLA Joins Our Future Memory + Future Knowledge Podcast Episode Read Post »

Protecting the Past to Power the Future: Internet Archive Europe Launches the Our Future Memory Campaign

Today marks a defining moment in the fight for digital rights in cultural heritage. From the shores of Lake Geneva, where minds have long gathered to shape the future of knowledge, Internet Archive Europe proudly announces the launch of Our Future Memory, a global campaign dedicated to safeguarding the digital rights of libraries, archives, and museums worldwide.

The timing could not be more deliberate. As we speak at the LIBER 2025 Annual Conference, surrounded by Europe’s leading library professionals, we are witnessing firsthand the urgency that drives this initiative. The “Four Rights for Libraries” panel session today, moderated by our own Jeff Ubois alongside distinguished speakers Justus Dreyling from COMMUNIA, Caroline De Cock from information labs, and Peter Routhier from Internet Archive, has crystallised what many of us have felt for years: the digital transformation has fundamentally altered the landscape for memory institutions, and not always for the better.

The Challenge We Face

While technology has promised universal access to human knowledge, many libraries today find themselves with fewer practical ways to fulfill their historic mission than they had decades ago. 

The shift from owning physical materials to licensing digital content has created an unprecedented crisis. License agreements routinely prohibit preservation activities that were once standard practice. Materials that exist only in digital formats often remain locked behind commercial platforms that restrict the very institutions meant to preserve them for future generations.

This is not merely a technical problem, it is a fundamental threat to the democratic principle that knowledge should be accessible to all, regardless of economic means or geographic location.

Our Response: Four Essential Rights

The Our Future Memory campaign centers on a simple premise: memory institutions must retain online the same rights and responsibilities they have historically exercised offline. To achieve this, we have articulated four fundamental digital rights:

  1. The Right to Collect materials in digital form, whether through digitisation, open market purchases, or other legal means. This includes content that exists only in streaming formats or behind platform restrictions.
  2. The Right to Preserve digital materials through backup, repair, and reformatting activities essential for long-term access. Without this right, today’s digital culture risks becoming tomorrow’s digital dark age.
  3. The Right to Lend digital content under traditional library conditions, maintaining the balanced approach to access that has served communities for centuries.
  4. The Right to Cooperate through sharing and transferring digital collections among institutions, ensuring that resource constraints do not create information deserts.

Building Momentum

The campaign has already gained remarkable traction. Since its initial signing in Aruba in April 2024, institutions across the globe have endorsed the statement. From the Netherlands Institute for Sound and Vision to the National Library of Serbia, from cultural organisations in Belgrade to public libraries throughout the Balkans, a diverse coalition is emerging.

This geographic and institutional diversity reflects a crucial truth: the challenges facing memory institutions transcend national boundaries and organisational types. The digitisation of culture affects us all, and our response must be equally comprehensive.

Why This Matters Now

The stakes extend far beyond library operations. Authors, researchers, journalists, and creators of all kinds depend on the sustained availability of cultural materials that only memory institutions preserve without regard to commercial viability. Future historians will judge us by how well we maintained access to the intellectual heritage of our time.

Join the Movement

Whether you lead a major research library or manage a small community archive, whether you work in policy development or daily patron services, your voice matters in this conversation.

We invite you to take action:

  • Sign the Statement: If you represent a memory institution or support organisation, visit ourfuturememory.org to learn about our verification process and add your endorsement.
  • Engage Your Community: Share this message with colleagues, board members, and stakeholders. The more voices we gather, the stronger our collective impact becomes.
  • Connect With Us: Follow our progress and join ongoing conversations about digital rights and cultural preservation.

From Lausanne today, we launch not just a campaign but a commitment to future generations. The memory institutions that have faithfully preserved human knowledge through countless technological transitions will continue to do so in the digital age, but only if we act with purpose and urgency.

Our future memory depends on the choices we make today. Join us in making them count.

Learn more about our work and the Our Future Memory campaign at ourfuturememory.org.

Protecting the Past to Power the Future: Internet Archive Europe Launches the Our Future Memory Campaign Read Post »

Standing Strong for Access to Knowledge: Brewster Kahle Speaks to NRC

On 7 April 2025, NRC Handelsblad published a thoughtful and deeply relevant interview with Brewster Kahle, founder of the Internet Archive, titled “Het grootste webarchief ter wereld wordt bedreigd door procederende uitgevers, zegt oprichter” (“The world’s largest web archive is under threat from litigious publishers, says founder”). We extend our sincere thanks to journalist Juurd Eijsvoogel for this important piece, which brings a nuanced spotlight to the fragile future of public access to knowledge.

For nearly three decades, Kahle has led the effort to build a library of the internet — a monumental task rooted in the same democratic values as the libraries of centuries past. In the interview, he explains the existential legal challenges the Internet Archive faces today and why its mission is more critical than ever.

“We are not trying to replace publishers — we’re trying to make sure the past is not forgotten,” Kahle tells NRC. “And Europe, with its rich cultural heritage and strong library tradition, must play a central role in this.”

At Internet Archive Europe, we share this conviction wholeheartedly. We believe Europe is not only a natural home for a growing web archive — it is a vital force in ensuring digital memory is preserved and access remains open for all.

Kahle also speaks with enthusiasm about the promise of artificial intelligence to serve this mission:

“AI helps us search data and texts, create summaries and translations, perform optical character recognition – all wonderful tools to bring our collections to life.

In this way, we can offer broader audiences access to Latin texts, to summaries of books they might never read in full. It can unleash a whole new wave of creativity.”

This is the spirit in which we’re growing Internet Archive Europe: to make memory, learning, and imagination thrive in a digital world. We are actively building collaborations with European institutions to make this vision a reality — one that is open, multilingual, and inclusive.

📎 Read the full NRC interview here (in Dutch).

Standing Strong for Access to Knowledge: Brewster Kahle Speaks to NRC Read Post »

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