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by nicbou 2231 days ago
Books get written once. Why can't websites? We still learn from documents that are centuries old, and when a cache of them is found, it makes the news.

Yet on the other side, we let so much information expire because the underlying technology is obsolete.

3 comments

Books are not going to turn into a botnet node. Books hardware is not getting less efficient when new paper is produced. Electronics will not live centuries unless you spend loads of money to maintain it.
Security arguments notwithstanding:

- Book contents frequently get updated. Revisions, translations, editions, adaptations.

- Book formats see change. There are at least some works which have seem multiple forms (oral traditions, clay tablets, vellum codices, stageplays, printed books, operatic adaptations, three-ring binders/loose-leaf circulars, magazine serials, paperbacks, radio serials, cinema series, comic-book adaptations, Broadway musicals, TV series, PS documents, PDF files, podcasts, videogame adaptations, YouTube channels, ebooks, ...)

Generally, websites are less a document format than a publishing mechanism. Print-on-demand-on-steroids.

We have the Internet Archive (archive.org) to backup lots of this information via the likes of the Wayback Machine.

Books & physically documents can decay naturally or be damaged physically, digital media can be damaged physically too. A hard drive or SSD can fail at any time, a disc can be scratched, a tape can get tangled. Easier and more accessible redundancy is an advantage of digital media.