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by omginternets 2122 days ago
Yes, I'm quite surprised (and frankly a bit disappointed) that this wasn't the article's main focus. If anything resembles book-burning today, it's the historical revisionism embedded in "cancel culture".
2 comments

I'd like to point out that "revisionism" is even scarier in the digital age.

Once you print a book/magazine/newspaper. It's done and locked down on what you said. You can't exactly take it back. Other than saying, "Hey, I was wrong" or whatever. I'm not talking about small errors or whatever. More, the general topic. Like, in the USA during the Bush 2 administration and prior, Democrats were against illegal immigration and Republicans were for it. Now, it's reversed. Hell, even Obama was for a lot more border security during his Senate days. But that changed during his run for presidency. (Broad brush strokes on the issue, obviously far more nuanced of a topic, I'm not on a hill for one or the other right now. This is strictly about the fact of their standpoints changing, nothing else. Calm your political panties.)

In the digital age of easy deleting and altering information, are we going to get to the point on trouble judging what is "historical fact" even more so than ever?

One simple thought, think of all the old racist cartoons from the Disney, Looney Toons era. Some more racist than others. But, lets say all of it is burned, deleted and gone. Hell, the old film reels aren't going to last too much longer anyways. 40 or 50 years from now, there's no actual proof of it existing except for some articles saying "there were racist cartoons by XYZ creator". Alright, prove it. "Well, it says here." But where is the actual cartoon? To be fair, a lack of evidence makes it hard to believe it ever happened. It's pretty fair, at that point, for someone to deny the cartoons ever happened. Especially since we're becoming a far more "evidence" based culture with a lack of anecdotal belief. A random blogger saying "XYZ existed" isn't proof either... because obviously you can't lie on the internet... cough cough. Photoshoping, deep fakes... the whole think of what "happened" is a scarier concept. At some point, do we just not trust a single damn thing on the internet?

I do know it's difficult to really wipe anything off the internet. Mostly due to the distributed nature and freedom of speech aspect of it... but I think a lot of people have to agree, both of those attributes are being threatened. Preserving history, no matter the sensitivity of it is pretty important.

Weird rant that's marginally related, but it's something that's been bothering me a lot the past few years. The "book burning" problem is going to get worse at this rate unless some major cultural changes happen.

One of the great treasures of the internet is Google books; something which exists in a precarious legal state and which could disappear. Worse; libraries are getting rid of physical copies. Probably especially in "non approved" subjects, which pretty much everything before 1945 was. There is libgen at least... but it's not as complete in older books.

Best thing on twitter I've seen is basically a list of NYT diffs: https://twitter.com/nyt_diff?ref_src=twsrc%5Egoogle%7Ctwcamp...

>One of the great treasures of the internet is Google books

I'm not saying your wrong... I just don't think that's enough. It's still digital. It can be changed and who would know? Yea, I guess the same can apply to print media... but if 10 people have a print-dated copy of something, you can cross reference on potential forgery-changes. You don't really get that with something like Google Books.

But again, physical copies still aren't perfect because of environmental impact. Storage. Care. Reprinting over time. What's worth reprinting? Fires. Floods. Organizing.

Though.... damn... I can't believe I'm saying this. I'm the first one, when the day comes, to happily pull the plug on cryptocurrency when humanity is done with the stupid thing... but after McAfee eats his own dick (look up his bitcoin bet if you don't know what I'm talking about). However, a distributed ledger of important libraries isn't the worst idea... minus the stupid fucking coin part. Just... that needs to be dropped.

Those two are completely different sins - even putting aside that "cancel culture" as a term is about whose ox is gored. Fire a teacher for once having done porn in college or expel a student because their mother works as a stripper and they call it "community standards". Or for approving of gay marriage back in the 80s or 90s. But when they get fired for wearing blackface, or supporting literal genocide suddently it is cancel culture out of control. Their complaints aren't that the game is fucked up but that they aren't winning anymore.

Judging the past by the standards of today may be fallacious (said complaints ignore contemparies pointing out how fucked up it was meaning the ideas certainly were conceivable) but it is discrediting and not the erasure of knowledge of book burning.