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by toomuchtodo
501 days ago
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Archive.org is outside of the reach of the US government, and is globally distributed. When the US government deletes or darks data (as it has recently done across wide swaths of the federal government website properties), you have no recourse. This means your argument about the resources that go into the US government as a data custodian are meaningless: the outcome is what is material, which is the archival and long term custody & availability of the data sets in scope. Arguably, the Internet Archive has recently proven better at this job than the US government (unsurprising). You're angry at a high value non profit operating on a limited budget. It's weird. I recommend focusing on more important issues than "it is icky around the richmond facility, the power goes out once in a while, and they use ambient air and convection for system cooling which I don't like." If you want to save democracy, the Internet Archive doesn't do that itself. It protects the historical record. If you want to save democracy, that's a different conversation. https://blog.archive.org/2024/05/08/end-of-term-web-archive/ https://web.archive.org/collection-search/EndOfTerm2024PreEl... (no affiliation) |
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https://eotarchive.org/partners/
And saying "archive.org is outside the reach of the US government" -- hell, it's not even outside the reach of the RIAA or the book company with the little penguin on the cover.
We should have proper supervised federal archiving and archive.org should be far better run, too.
And I don't know what Archive Team is but maybe they could update their site to provide some information on the people involved. And perhaps update their understanding of what's possible with docker containers while they're at it.
Because the counterpoint to a radicalized Musk screwing around with government databases isn't an opposing group of anonymous radicals screwing around with commercial databases.