By preserving each Web page, rather than just pieces of content, as it appeared on each candidate's site daily, the archive shows the context of how events unfolded, says Steven Schneider, a professor at the State University of New York Institute of Technology, a co-director of the joint project. An example of election 2002 history unfolding on the Web is the tragic death of Minnesota Sen. Paul Wellstone, who was killed in a plane crash weeks before the election. The archive preserves the evolution of the campaign, including the dramatic changes of Wellstone's site after his accident.
The archive, which covered the campaign season from July 2002 through the end of November, also includes the evolving election-night results, in which 12,000 Web pages were captured hourly.
Key to the archive is indexing and cataloguing software services that let users search and retrieve the stored Web material, says Schneider, who developed the cataloguing services. "The cataloging capabilities are what enables a person to make sense of the Web archive and all its material," he says.
The Library of Congress' Election 2002 archive represents hundreds of sites that are being preserved for historical purposes. However, this kind of archiving and cataloging has potential for other government sites, as well as for smaller-scale projects by companies that want to preserve their external or internal Web material. Kirsten Foot, a professor of communications at the University of Washington and the other co-director the joint project, estimates that approximately 7.3 million Web pages are added to the 4 billion pages that exist online daily. "We're in the process of exploring how this cataloging service can be offered to the commercial world," she says.
The Library of Congress will archive and catalog other events, although they have not yet been chosen, a spokesman says. Foot and Schneider also worked on a Library of Congress project that archived and cataloged Web pages related to Sept. 11, 2001.
Open Government: A San Francisco Treat
San Francisco took Obama's pledge of open and transparent government seriously, and launched datasf.org -- its attempt to give the city's data back to its citizens. Developers and users have embraced it, and the city's mayor is already looking ahead....

NOTE: Offer valid for U.S., U.S. possessions, & Canada only.