• Blaster M
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    411 months ago

    Hope the Internet Archive can back it up, I guess.

    • MudMan
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      811 months ago

      IA is quickly becoming a massive, risky single point of failure that is one bad lawsuit away from causing a major problem.

      I want to hope they have an exit strategy, but I’m thinking we need to start providing alternatives. A single backup is no backup at all, and all that.

      • @Spotlight7573@lemmy.world
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        711 months ago

        You mean a lawsuit like the one about the “Great 78 Project” by the music companies or maybe the one about the “National Emergency Library” by the book publishers?

        I think you’re right that we need to start working on alternatives, hopefully something decentralized. The Wayback Machine would be an irreplaceable loss though if the data isn’t preserved somehow.

        • MudMan
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          311 months ago

          Well, it’s not the lawsuit that would trigger it, it’s the outcome of it. So yes.

          Yes on the other things, too. I can’t imagine they would be opposed to working with alternatives to provide Wayback Machine fallbacks.

          • DdCno1
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            411 months ago

            The Wayback Machine in particular is one of the greatest treasures of the Internet. An absolutely invaluable tool and so far entirely irreplaceable.

            • MudMan
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              111 months ago

              Honestly, it should be a public resource.

              I mean, public libraries and archives being a mandatory requirement for copyright enforcement and publishing records is a thing, and the Wayback Machine proves it’s technologically feasible to approximate it for the Internet, so…