I am sure that those of us involved in audio preservation are well aware,
there are not adequate funds to preserve even a small portion of what is
crumbling, yet, that information is not of enough "value" to generate the
support it needs for its preservation. Maybe some of it will
be sought out, but probably only after it is gone.
I cannot help but wonder if libraries make aa mistake by giving away
information, as I would suspect, that most people take that which is free,
for granted, and don't value it unless it is taken away, or costs them money.
Happily there are those that have placed great value on both providing
that "free" access and having that "free" access. It seems that
our libraries now are the internet, and our libraries are archives. Yet
even on the internet, getting to much of the most valued information, costs
money. It just seems to me, that the way libraries operate...I think of
how google can catalog the internet, and how much it costs a library to
acquire, catalog a book, put it on the shelf and circulate it. Libraries
would seem to priced out of the marketplace.