• @sugartits@lemmy.world
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    1603 months ago

    What? No. What utter nonsense.

    I should be able to remove a website that I created and paid for without there being some silly law that I have to archive it.

    As the owner, it’s up to me if I want it up or not. After all, I’m paying for the bloody thing.

    • TimeSquirrel
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      613 months ago

      The vast majority of regular internet users never think of things from this perspective because they’ve never been in a position of running a public facing website. To most people, the Internet is just there to be taken for granted like the public street and park outside someone’s house. All the stuff on it just exists there by itself. That’s also why we have issues with free speech online, where people expect certain rights that don’t exist, because these aren’t publicly owned websites and people aren’t getting that.

      • @snooggums@midwest.social
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        313 months ago

        To most people, the Internet is just there to be taken for granted like the public street and park outside someone’s house.

        Both of which require maintenance that most people don’t think about…

        • @Jtotheb@lemmy.world
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          43 months ago

          And both of which impact its users’ lives, thus why the users feel they should have a say in what’s done with the space, even if they aren’t the owners of the space

          • @bitfucker@programming.dev
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            23 months ago

            Huh, the difference is that a website is not akin to a public park but privately owned park with or without entrance fee. The owner is nice enough to open the park and let you do whatever you want for free with the cleaning and maintenance is paid by the owner, but when the park is closed, would you still say the owner should still be forced to maintain it?

            • @Jtotheb@lemmy.world
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              53 months ago

              I don’t particularly agree with the concept of the privately owned park and feel that it has ruined the social lives of Americans, since they’re no longer allowed to “loiter” (exist) anywhere outside of work and home. And also, yes, I think you should have to maintain the property you’ve taken away from the surrounding community or else give it back. I don’t think the comparison to the Web necessarily holds up, but I do think that people’s contributions to a website remain theirs even if you pay a lawyer to write down that it’s not. The concept of complete forfeiture of any claim to your work because-I-said-so is very made up. Your hard work is not.

              • @bitfucker@programming.dev
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                23 months ago

                Hmmm, yeah it gets harder to associate it with physical reality when user generated content is introduced. Maybe an archival of said content is mandated but then again, who is going to serve the archive. In the case of youtube, it would be almost impossible

                • @Jtotheb@lemmy.world
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                  12 months ago

                  I was just talking about YouTube last night! It’s easy to forget the mind bending amount of data uploaded and stored every single day. It is impossible to draw a comparison to anything that has ever come before. And it will all have to go away at some point, as far as I’m concerned. It’s untenable to keep more than a tiny fraction of it. There is so much interesting stuff… and the site has existed for the blink of an eye. Nobody can consume a meaningful amount of the information stored on it, nobody could possibly categorize and manage a system of valuation and sortation. Barring a radical reorganization of economic system and values, any sort of proposed YouTube Archival Project never makes a dent. And files are only getting bigger… crazy to think that my kids will likely never get through the amount of photos and videos of my childhood that exist, yet I currently possess all of the photographic proof of my mom’s parents’ existence in the back of a small drawer.

      • @superkret@feddit.org
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        113 months ago

        Maybe the internet should be treated more like public infrastructure. If everyone communicates primarily online, the lack of freedom of speech on online platforms is a problem. And the sudden disappearance of a service people depend on, too (not that I think this website is a good example).

      • @funtrek@discuss.tchncs.de
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        163 months ago

        Maybe for sites from corporations or similar sources. But people should have always have the right to be forgotten. And in fact in some countries they do have this right.

        • Want to be forgotten is about personally identifiable information. Other work, which is covered under copyright, which means if someone has legally obtained a copy of it, as long as they’re not distributing it, is their right to do whatever the fuck they want with it. Even hold it until the copyright expires at which point they can publish it as much as they want.

      • @evatronic@lemm.ee
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        53 months ago

        A “Library of Congress” for published web content maybe. Some sort of standard that allows / requires websites that publish content on oublic-facing sites to also share a permanent copy with an archive, without having the archive have to scrape it.

        Sort of like how book publishers send a copy to the LoC.

      • @Metz@lemmy.world
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        3 months ago

        I’m not sure if i can agree with that. A third party cannot simply override the rights of the owner. If i want my website gone, i want it gone from everywhere. no exception.

        That kinda also goes in the whole “Right to be forgotten” direction. I have absolute sovereignty over my data. This includes websites created by me.

        • Yes they can, otherwise Disney can decide that that DVD you bought 10 years ago, you’re no longer allowed to have and you must destroy it.

          Right to be forgotten is bullshit, not from an ideological standpoint right, but purely from a practicality stand point the old rule of once its on the internet its on the internet forever stands true. That’s not even getting started on the fact that right to be forgotten is about your personal information, not any material you may publish that is outside of that.

          • @atrielienz@lemmy.world
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            83 months ago

            Disney can decide to terminate that license but the disc is another story. The license is for the media on the disc but the physical disc itself is owned by the person who bought it. This is literally why a company can remove a show or movie or song from your digital library. The license holder can always revoke the license. It was harder to enforce with physical media (and cost prohibitive in a lot of cases), but still possible.

              • @atrielienz@lemmy.world
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                3 months ago

                It’s the same licensing agreement. I phrased what I said to specifically adhere to what they say in their own terms of use in accordance with FCC regulation.

                https://disneytermsofuse.com/english/

                If you were to, say in 1990, get caught broadcasting your copy of a Disney movie without the legal ability to do so, they could absolutely use the court system to revoke your right to the licensed copy of that media and have it confiscated.

          • Saik0
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            3 months ago

            No. When you purchase the dvd you become the owner of that specific disc… you never gained ownership of my website just because you visited and copied my content.

              • SaltySalamander
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                43 months ago

                I’d better never see you bitching about AI scraping your content. I’ll remind you of this very comment.

                • @antonim@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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                  33 months ago

                  For what it’s worth, I agree with the other commenter and, as much as I dislike AI as it currently is, I have never and probably never will bitch about the scraping. If I put things out there online, I am aware that they may be used in ways that I never intended. That’s how it has always been, after all.

              • Saik0
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                43 months ago

                No, I never granted you any ownership of my content. Period. You didn’t pay me, you didn’t engage in any contract with me.

                Simply archiving my stuff and running away then publishing it as your own is theft.

                • @antonim@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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                  53 months ago

                  You’ve put it out there for free, though, and the data literally ends up on my machine because you made it do that, so what’s the problem with me saving the data on my machine for later, and potentially sharing it elsewhere for free again?

                  then publishing it as your own is theft

                  1. This scenario (misattribution of content) has nothing to do with the previous discussion. The other commenter is making an analogy to CDs, owning a CD and lending it to others doesn’t mean you’re claiming its content is your own creation.

                  2. Theft implies deprivation of ownership. Calling this theft is like calling piracy theft. It may be illegal by this or that metric, but it’s not normal theft.

          • @Metz@lemmy.world
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            03 months ago

            You compare entirely different things here. I’m talking about a website i own not a product i sell. And no, this “on the internet forever” is complete and utter nonsense that was never true to begin with. the amount of stuff lost to time easely dwarfs the one still around.

            • You chose to distribute said website to everyone on the internet. I chose to exercise my rights of fair use to make a local convenience copy of said website. I can then theoretically hold, said local convenience copy, for as long as I want, until your copyright expires, at which point I can publish it.

              It’s a bold assumption that that data is not just sitting on someone’s hard drive somewhere.

              • @Metz@lemmy.world
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                3 months ago

                You are moving the goalpost. again. The talk was about the Internet Archive providing a copy of my website to the public. Not you storing it somewhere on your drive for personal use. Although that’s also a rather tricky legal matter.

                But nice for you to agree with the rest. Yes, you could at one point publish a copy. 70 Years after my death. and not a second before that. and only if its not specific protected because i contains personal information. i think the protection is not limited in that case.

        • @grue@lemmy.world
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          3 months ago

          Information doesn’t have “owners.” It only has – at most – “copyright holders,” who are being allowed to temporarily borrow control of it from the Public Domain.

          • @Telorand@reddthat.com
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            33 months ago

            Imagine that absolute historical clusterfuck if terrible politicians and bad actors could just delete entire portions of their history.

      • @GBU_28@lemm.ee
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        3 months ago

        This is just like AI scraping

        Edit if you allow a third party to “archive” your content, the ship has sailed. I’m not advocating for or against anything but once your stuff is scraped (by anyone) it’s gone.

          • @GBU_28@lemm.ee
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            3 months ago

            I’m not discussing what they do with it, I’m discussing the raw act of ingesting your page.

            Cats and bags

            To venture into opinion, I think there shouldn’t be “every right” to archive your page, for any purposes such as archive or ai or whatever.

            Edit but I acknowledge how the open internet works and the futility of trying to control that

            • It seems like a very dangerous, very slippery slope. The first people to abuse this would be the big corporations who want to hide and cover up as much as they possibly can. I think the copyright law framework is a useful lens to view this with which I outlined in my response above.

              • @GBU_28@lemm.ee
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                13 months ago

                Totally get what you’re saying, but I’m highlighting the mechanical step of a third party having “every right” to scrape or persist your content is in complete contrast to the other points in this thread about rights to be forgotten and so on.

    • @voracitude@lemmy.world
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      3 months ago

      Ehh, I halfway agree, but there is value in keeping historical stuff around. Heritage laws exist in a good number of countries so that all the cultural architecture doesn’t get erased by developers looking to turn a quick buck or rich people who think that 500 year old castle could really use an infinity pool hot tub; there are strict requirements for a building to be heritage-listed but once they are, the owner is required by law to maintain it to historical standards.

      I only halfway disagree because you’re right, forcing people to pay for something has never sat right with me generally. As long as the laws don’t bite people like you and me, e.g. there are relatively high requirements for something to be considered “culturally relevant” enough to preserve, I’d be okay with some kind of heritage system for preserving the internet.

      • @grue@lemmy.world
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        3 months ago

        Heritage laws exist in a good number of countries so that all the cultural architecture doesn’t get erased

        Copyright law itself is supposed to be such a law (at least in the US), by the way.

        US Constitution, Article 1, Section 8, Clause 8:

        To promote the Progress of Science and useful Arts, by securing for limited Times to Authors and Inventors the exclusive Right to their respective Writings and Discoveries;

        (emphasis added)

        Deleting copyrighted works is THEFT from the Public Domain!

        • @voracitude@lemmy.world
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          93 months ago

          No, it is not. Copyright law ensures the original creator gets paid for their work and nobody can imitate it (quite literally “the right to copy”) without permission. Copyright law is about making money.

          Heritage law is about preserving history.

          • @grue@lemmy.world
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            3 months ago

            Copyright law is precisely a means to an end of encouraging more works to be created (and thus eventually enter the public domain) and absolutely nothing else. In particular, compensation to the creator is nothing but a proverbial “carrot,” not any sort of moral right or entitlement.

            It’s also a power of Congress, by the way, which means it’s optional. Congress may enact copyright law if it so chooses, but is not obligated by the constitution to do so. This is in stark contrast to e.g. the Bill of Rights, which is written the opposite way: presuming such rights exist and prohibiting the government from infringing upon them. In other words, if the framers meant for copyright to be an actual “right,” they clearly would’ve plainly said so!

            • @voracitude@lemmy.world
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              03 months ago

              I think you don’t understand the difference between fundamental rights and regular old rights. A right does not have to be fundamental to be a right.

              And, if copyright law were about encouraging creation, it would not restrict the use of other peoples’ work.

              Would you do me a favour? Read back over this thread until you realise you just argued creation is “encouraged” by a category of law which only restricts the use of other peoples’ work, including modifying it to create derivative works, and has been used as a club against creation to boot. Consider, how does Nintendo kill Smash tourneys? How many YouTube videos have been wrongly DMCA’d?

    • Wowbagger
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      93 months ago

      We as a society gives your protections through copyright, why can we not let that protection come with some requirements?

    • @DudeDudenson
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      43 months ago

      Yup that’s why internet archive is a thing, a site should not be forced to host their content forever but the hivemind in lemmy has a hard on against any and all corporate entities and they’ll justify any kind of over reach as long as it’s against one

    • @essteeyou@lemmy.world
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      13 months ago

      I mostly agree, but I do think that if the website was partly funded by subscriptions or the users paid via advertising/their data then there’s a gap for saying it should remain available.

      • @ramble81@lemm.ee
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        43 months ago

        Cool cool, so who will be paying for the time to archive it, the medium the archive it to, and the accessibility should someone else want to access it? I mean I can put a copy on a floppy disk and keep it in my desk and say it’s archived.

  • Daemon Silverstein
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    453 months ago

    It’s a complicated matter if we consider things such as the GDPR’s “Right to be forgotten”.

  • @peanuts4life@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    383 months ago

    Why is everyone so mad about this? I mean, it’s a salty article, but yeah, it kinda sucks when publications don’t give notice before closing down. I think providing the public, including previous contributors, time to archive content is a good practice.

    • @kevindqc@lemmy.world
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      233 months ago

      It’s a good practice, sure. But as per the headline, the author wants to make it a law. That’s why people are not having it.

      • @peanuts4life@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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        263 months ago

        That’s not really what the article is about. The author even concedes that such a law would never, and perhaps never should, happen; rather, he feels that corporations will not adopt best practices of preservation unless compelled, and it pisses him off.

        The title is deliberate hyperbolic. He’s clearly pissed.

      • @antonim@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        3 months ago

        , it’s a salty article

        Actually the author himself is somewhat harmed by this situation. I would be salty too. When I wish to write my CV, I can say: my text have been published at X and Y. Especially nice if it’s an important and well known publication. Now a part of his CV is literally erased, he can’t access his own texts anymore (not even on Internet Archive). That’s… utterly ridiculous. It’s a common practice to send the author a copy (or multiple) of the text he has published, he has every right to own a copy of them. Now the copy that was intended to be available to everyone is not available even to him. Something of the sort really has happened to me too when a website I published an article on a site underwent a redesign and now the text just isn’t available anymore. Admittedly it’s still on IA, but it’s an awkward situation.

        • @peanuts4life@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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          123 months ago

          Yeah, right? I mean, imagine if YouTube when down and just deleted all the videos. People would be up and arms demanding legislative action. There would be endless lawsuits.

          As a creative, you rely on platforms to not obliterate your stuff. At least not immediately. This guy has a horse in the race of this site.

          • @antonim@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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            63 months ago

            What do you mean by “saving a copy”? I still have the .doc file somewhere in my emails. If I told you I’m a serious published writer, and then you asked me where you can read my texts, and I sent you a .doc that hasn’t been proofread, would you take me seriously?

  • @IsThisAnAI@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    Good Lord what a dumb idea.

    Edit: I like an idiot couldn’t help myself and actually read some of this.

    Is this an 11 year old?

  • @rottingleaf@lemmy.world
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    223 months ago

    Maybe the Web should look more like Freenet or like BitTorrent.

    But using a technology working the known way and trying to force conveniences by law seems sisyphean and harmful in many aspects.

    If someone wants to keep old versions, let them. But forcing companies to host something is I dunno.

    • @webghost0101@sopuli.xyz
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      73 months ago

      This is a strawman towards the actual issue which is the loss of information.

      The least they could do is just provide a copy of their material to internet archive or some torrent site.

      I think similarly about digital services stopping or hardware no longer getting support. Thats a fine and reasonable economy wise but at least have the moral decency to open source it instead.

      The customer always gets screwed and the company somehow gets to keep the money. This case is slightly different, i don’t know if you had to pay for access but my sentiment of future use holds.

      • @rottingleaf@lemmy.world
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        13 months ago

        If someone had to pay for it, then sure, laws should address the issue. If there’s been some access time paid for remaining.

      • @RememberTheApollo_@lemmy.world
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        23 months ago

        According to the site you have to buy tokens to use the network. Despite stating that the maidsafe network is decentralized, nobody controls it, etc., etc., having to buy tokens seems to be a barrier to entry.

        I don’t know, I guess I have a hard time with a network that reserves access via a coin that fluctuates on a market price. Seems like they’re playing a “it’s like bitcoin, but not, but kinda is” type of game.

        • @BlueMagma@sh.itjust.works
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          13 months ago

          My understanding of its system is the following:

          Hosting data costs money, so in order to have a decentralised hosting system there need to be an incentive for people to contribute hardware. Developing apps/websites costs money.

          In the current internet, the incentive is that you can make money by harvesting people’s data (selling them to advertisers) and displaying ads to users.

          What maidsafe proposes is that users use some of their hardware to host data, get paid in a dedicated currency that they then use to access website/apps which remunerate app developper. In this manner everyone has an incentive: users have an incentive to host data to not pay anything, developpers have an incentive to make apps in order to get paid, company and stakeholders have an incentive to invest into the system in order to have a presence/visibility.

          I know nobody wants to pay to access the internet, but the truth is we already are paying for it, we just don’t realise it. If we want an ad-free internet there needs to be some other way users are paying for content, I think contributing CPU and HDD is a nice solution because it wouldn’t feel like paying.

      • @rottingleaf@lemmy.world
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        13 months ago

        The site is atrocious. I’ll look at it another time and try to get what it’s really about. But it seems really ADHD-hostile.

  • @higgsboson@dubvee.org
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    163 months ago

    What is it with people who think everything they don’t like should be illegal? Have you never read a history book? Authoritarianism is bad mmkay

      • @theherk@lemmy.world
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        3 months ago

        Not always.

        e: To clarify, I’m not saying all preservation is bad but that not all preservation is good. Take for example a website sharing the stories of named child victims or whatever revolts you… some things are best not preserved. If I host a website of stories that are my own creation, I should be able to take that down right? Just seems strange to me, the concept that nothing should fade into obscurity. I may be looking at it wrong.

  • teft
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    3 months ago

    We can’t get companies to clean up toxic waste sites that they create yet people think they can get companies to backup a website?

  • @SkunkWorkz@lemmy.world
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    123 months ago

    Or maybe writers should just archive their own work. So they can make it available on the Internet Archive when their work becomes inaccessible.

  • jungle
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    53 months ago

    Stopped reading after the first paragraph.

    • @kevindqc@lemmy.world
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      43 months ago

      Yep.

      “a clown show of a company”

      Wow, I’m sure this will be a good and unbiased article! /s

    • Todd Bonzalez
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      23 months ago

      He waits till the last paragraph to admit that he doesn’t know what he’s talking about, which is weird given that he still published all the dumb shit he said in the preceding paragraphs.

  • Todd Bonzalez
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    -23 months ago

    So this guy’s argument is that companies with commercial websites should be forced by the government to keep their websites online for some predetermined amount of time after announcing that they will be shutting down, so that other people can pilfer the content, on the grounds that shutting down a website includes relinquishing all property rights to the content hosted there?

    I’m gonna go ahead and guess that this guy isn’t a lawyer.

    Also, and maybe this is a stretch, but this article expresses a suspicious amount of concern for integrity in games journalism…

      • Todd Bonzalez
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        13 months ago

        lmao at being called a bootlicker in a conversation about GameInformer Magazine.