UK plan to digitise wills and destroy paper originals "insane" say experts::Department hopes to save £4.5m a year by digitising – then binning – about 100m wills that date back 150 years
I understand why it is not a good idea to digitize, as tampering might be easier to do without any traces, but why do they store wills for 150 years? One would think that by then they are outdated and no longer needed.
Edit: looks like the concern is about historical artifacts. Feels even more ridiculous than I thought. What's next, taking pictures of historical paintings and destroying originals? Why not digitize and still keep the originals?
I understand why it is not a good idea to digitize, as tampering might be easier to do without any traces, but why do they store wills for 150 years? One would think that by then they are outdated and no longer needed.
Edit: looks like the concern is about historical artifacts. Feels even more ridiculous than I thought. What's next, taking pictures of historical paintings and destroying originals? Why not digitize and still keep the originals?
That's where I'm at. Why not both? Redundancy is good,
Paper copies are good to have till they're no longer necessary (edit: and apparently these aren't necessary anymore)
Digital copies are also useful for obvious reasons
They aren't necessary, that's the point.
They want to preserve them as historical documents and the government is trying to cut storage costs.
Oh
Well in that case I'm a lot more meh about this. Thanks!
Yeah I'm not a historian so I'm not sure the value of keeping the originals.