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We’ve all heard the warning that “The internet is forever.” But in reality, huge swaths of the digital world are disappearing all the time: websites go dark, governments purge public records, social media posts vanish, and streaming platforms remove films and music, Without deliberate efforts to preserve this material, much of our recent history could simply cease to exist. The Internet Archive has spent decades fighting that disappearance, most nottably through its Wayback Machine, which preserves snapshots of a web that is otherwise constantly being rewritten. Current Affairs spoke with Mark Graham, director of the Wayback Machine, and librarian Chris Freeland, co-editor of the Internet Archive’s new Vanishing Culture report, about why the internet is far more fragile than we think and what is lost when corporations and governments can make information disappear.

Nathan J. Robinson

Okay, listen, I want to start with a phrase—a phrase that will get under your skin, a phrase that I'm sure you've heard many times, and that we're going to correct here at the beginning. And the phrase is some variation on "the internet is forever," that is to say, when you put something online, it's never going to go away. I've heard that all of my life; I have lived through the birth of the internet, the entire history of the internet, and I've heard that all the time. So, tell us, is the internet in fact forever? And if not, in what ways is it not?

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[-] breakcore@discuss.tchncs.de 2 points 2 days ago

Try adding "before:2023" to your google searches. Should prevent AI slop in the results.

[-] its_me_xiphos@beehaw.org 3 points 1 day ago

I do for everything. Alas...new video games :-(. Going to need to go back to ye olde strategy guides. Which, reminds me. I used to own the TIE Fighter series for PC back in the...gosh...mid 90s? The strategy guide had an entire storyline woven into it from the "main characters" perspective. Super cool.

[-] breakcore@discuss.tchncs.de 2 points 1 day ago

Yea, I get what you mean.

Old guides for games where super cool! I remember getting a thick binder with photo copies from a friend :)

Passed it on to another friend, when I had finished the game.

this post was submitted on 07 Jul 2026
34 points (100.0% liked)

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