While I think it's an interesting idea to have the LOC 'acquire' the Internet Archive, it's not addressing the more fundamental questions around copyright, fair use, public access, and ownership. If we actually tried to create a system, in the context of today's technology, globalism, and ways of creating work, that 'incentivised innovation' or, as it originally was framed, 'Encouragement of Learning' we would not come up with the copyright system we have. That's the conversation I would like to see.
Very good point, but not at odds. Let's have both:
1. An organization like LoC (or UN sponsored "government" organization) take over the Internet Archive. Let curators curate and conserve.
2. A discussion about reform of copyright, public domain, "intellectual property", incentivizing innovation, etc.
[EDIT] And while we're at it:
3. Let's also have a discussion about the legitimacy and desirability of tools and tricks used to enforce corporate lawyer whims (ie.: DRM, 20 page EULAs, cookie banners, terms of service, etc.)
We have been having that discussion in the courts for decades. The consensus is that the tools we have are at least part of why eight of the top ten global websites are run by American companies. To the extent you want to have a thriving marketplace to ply (what I assume is) your trade, these tools are at least desirable.
I do agree that the existence of law that supports these techniques is a choice, and that it’s entirely possible that avoidance of these techniques might win in the marketplace.
> The consensus is that the tools we have are at least part of why eight of the top ten global websites are run by American companies.
Might be some part of that. I suspect that "richest nation in the world" and "had widespread Internet access years ahead of anyone else" are larger parts.
> My thinking is that frequent partner The Library of Congress can put a stop to this by buying the Internet Archive. Make it a government body and protect all that digital content.
I'm not allowed to eat this candy bar. I wrote a sticky note that says I'm not allowed to eat it. Its not like I can just ignore or rewrite the sticky note whenever I want.
Congress passing a law saying it can't do X doesn't mean they can't just come back a few years later and decide to remove that rule, assuming its not unconstitutional.
before http (ncsa mosaic is march 1993), I was using gopher, newsgroups and xarchie. When you saw a reference to a program in a newsgroup, it was often easy with xarchie to find a public ftp mirror where you could download it. I remember reading CERT advisories on gopher and having noticed that at my school, the vulnerable command xloadmodule was present (sunOS 4.3). I warned the admin and after 15 days of no reaction and no answer, I became root of all the servers. Good old days ;-)
The internet is of course much older than the WWW. And the internet had and still has many non-WWW ways to communicate and publish content. But applying the term "WWW" to any non-HTML non-HTTP technologies is revisionist, and I'd argue just wrong.
the page is poorly coded and later paragraphs load and unload making it seem as if the article prematurely finishes, which explains why you might have missed it. the idea is for the Library of Congress to buy the Internet Archive to protect it from legal action
my thoughts on this are that it's a good idea, but it can't be the only solution. moving from a single point of failure to a more secure single point of failure is okay, but a better solution would be for the Library of Congress and similar public bodies around the world to be able to buy/obtain a copy of the archive and the protocols it uses to do the archiving. this would practically guarantee the permanency of the data and, if it was deemed legally viable, provide a decent revenue source
Who controls the past controls the future. Who controls the present controls the past. There is no enumerated power which gives the federal government the authority to manage an internet archive. So this isn't just crazy and dangerous, it's illegal as well.
It's alway funny to see people suggest things the federal government should do without considering its deliberately limited nature and why that should go out the window with a constitutional amendment. This isn't the UK where we can just make up the law however we want. 10th amendment anyone? Enumerated powers?
this is a patently bizarre comment. so the library of congress too is illegal? perhaps the federal government shouldn't be able to take photos, or tell the time or keep records
Every creation of the federal government is presumptively unlawful unless and until it is rooted reasonably within one of the enumerated powers. The federal government has speech rights, obviously. It can pick up a camera and take photos like anyone else. It can keep records only in keeping with the constitution (e.g. 4th amendment) and statutory authorization. E.g. no national gun registry and no cell phone location data without a warrant.
Only to the extent that the library of congress is necessary and proper to regulating interstate commerce are its activities authorized. As soon as it strays from that, it must find another enumerated power with which to justify its actions. For instance, if the library of congress were to begin deporting illegal aliens, that would be incontrovertibly within the enumerated powers. To say nothing of the will of Congress.
A centralized copyright register is obviously something important to interstate commerce. Existing internet archives do not keep track of whose copyright is whose. So to transfer ownership of such a thing to the library of congress would not serve any copyright function related to interstate commerce. Surely even you can see that. So you're going to have to get real fucking creative, buddy!
The simple solution is a compromise, let them archive, but they must wait some amount of years before it is available publicly.
Hundred year copyright is certainly too long, that is much longer than ideas are protected in a patent which costs far more in research and development.
Wanting to have a government organization buy something like the Internet Archives sounds like a terrible idea for me. It's not like you'd keep lobbyists away from it.
A great alternative is to build the Internet Archive so that after something is there "for a while", it is archived in a way that anyone can efficiently distribute it (thinking about long-term resiliency) and even survive a conspiracy to destroy it.
We already have a Library of Congress. If they want a copy of the Internet Archive, they can just download one. (The raw WARC files from the web crawls are not publicly available, but I'm sure they could work something out.)
I know websites (and some of my clients) who are actually actively REMOVING copies of their website from the Internet Archive.
There's a specific process for getting all of the content removed, and asking them to not archive the website.
For some ecommerce websites, they're removing copies from Internet Archive because there's pricing data that's getting archived.
I've also had clients remove copies because they've had a big problem with scrapers who are scraping the copies of the site in Internet Archive. They've been able to (mostly) stop scrapers on the site, but having archived copies of the site allows scrapers to scrape the Internet Archive.
Heh. What’s nuts is that, stripped of other copyright-bearing context, it’s my understanding that they’d not have a (legal, but policy, maybe) leg to stand on asking for pricing data to be removed. That’s supposed to be free (as in freedom) to anyone who finds a way to get ahold of it. Sucks that they’re killing the entire archive over something they have no actual claim to.
I agree, now that you pointed it out, there probably isn't a legal leg to stand on. IANAL, though--would be interested in hearing from an attorney about that.
Regardless, if you can prove you're the website owner, then Internet Archive will remove all of your content and stop archiving your site if you ask them.
Right, by IA policy they can ask to have the site taken down. What’s unfortunate about it is that they’re doing it over data that they aren’t supposed to be able to restrict, and the rest of the site (which I doubt they much mind being on IA) is caught in the crossfire, as the means by which they’re getting the part they care about taken down. Like, they probably wouldn’t bother except that the archive happens to contain data that isn’t supposed to be restricable anyway but de facto is, if they take the whole archive of the site down.
> My thinking is that frequent partner The Library of Congress can put a stop to this by buying the Internet Archive. Make it a government body and protect all that digital content. I think these lawyers may be less inclined to sue the US Federal government.
This is the opposite approach of what I would consider a potential solution. The information should be stored in a system expensive enough to sabotage that no government will consider it. Data should be replicated as many times as possible and replicas should be as physically distributed as possible.
Unfortunately, that's the opposite of what I would consider a practical solution.
The system you describe doesn't exist. If it did then Sci-hub would already be using it. Instead, Sci-hub is subject to essentially the same risks of takedown as IA.
I think they should focus more on signing structured data and indexes so people can just exchange IA content however they like and know it hasn't been tampered with. There's not much a state will be able to do as long as they rotate keys, etc, so there are just state demanded revocations which can be ignored.
If the US cares enough (and they have a long track record of being irrationally overprotective of IP) then the IA becomes a bargaining chip for whatever shithole it's hosted in. It's not a long term solution.
My thinking is that frequent partner The Library of Congress can put a stop to this by buying the Internet Archive. Make it a government body and protect all that digital content.
So instead of losing all the copyrighted content piece by piece we lose access to it all at once?
Someone needs to save the Internet Archives from the lawyers and I have an idea
More like someone needs to save the Internet Archive from Brewster Kahle. He and all of us knew the rules of the game: the IA was allowed to illegally host copyrighted content that wasn't making them money as long as it wasn't being exploited by the copyright holders and they paid lip service to IP law with things like controlled borrowing. Then they kicked the anthill with the emergency library. We pulled our hair out warning them not to and they did it anyway. Maybe their actions were morally justified but they were just so blisteringly stupid that it's hard not to feel betrayed.
> More like someone needs to save the Internet Archive from Brewster Kahle.
Can't vote this enough. As flawed as the rules are, you know them. The rules should be changed, but you don't change them by blatantly breaking them in the most flagrant way possible.
Right. If IA wants to spin off a legally-separate "Red Team" of radical activists to demonstrate how ignoring copyright laws enriches us all, I'll be happy to donate. Using the IA for this is reckless and doomed to failure. Do you think Sci-Hub would've survived if they'd started flouting the law as a California-based nonprofit with hundreds of employees? Hell no.
None of you guys built this. Brewster Kahle did. Everyone fantasizes about how they would have sold at the top. But you won't. Ultimately, the Internet Archive took balls. That was the defining attribute. And the guy with balls was always going to take it farther than just that. That's what it means to have balls.
All the guys who fantasize that they would have stopped at the perfect stopping point would have never started. You can run a mirror now. You can run a crawler now.
Heritrix is free software. The IA dump is retrievable. What's stopping you from making The Compliant Internet Archive? Nothing really except for the fact that none of the armchair quarterbacks have even seen what a ball looks like.
This needs to be said in every single thread where the IA comes up. With all the pearl clutching about how "irresponsible" and "reckless" Kahle is, you would think he owes something personally to each and every one of us. He's fighting tooth and nail for what he believes in. Anyone who doesn't like that should go build something of their own and fight in the way that they see fit.
He's fighting tooth and nail for what he believes in. Anyone who doesn't like that should go build something of their own and fight in the way that they see fit.
Why does this apply to Brewster Kahle and not, say, Elon Musk?
Rights holders have managed to wring perpetual copyright and things like the DMCA from congress, there is no way they won’t just hire different lawyers good at influencing the government and shut it down there. In fact this might even get administrative regulations made that make any private attempts illegal too.
Frankly I say we let them delete all public backups of internet culture. Eventually there would be a backlash when this goes too far.
Lots of games, websites and TV shows would be gone. Let them.
Don't make local backups either. Or at least encrypt the backups and make sure they will be lost when we die.
*Let DRM and Copyright become the modern equivalent of book burning.*
Let people forget. Let it be the government's problem to preserve knowledge and history. And let it decide when the cost is higher than whatever benefits we get from strict authoritarian levels of Copyright protections
Yes but book burning had backlash, too. And frankly if we are really that stupid then we didn't deserve tech and culture in the first place. Might as well delete wikipedia. Let people forget everything, then evolution will take over. /s
"We should delete data so that people get upset" is just shy of "we should shoot some kids so people will finally get upset". If we're going for over the top statements anyway.
When we look at the actual current US sociopolitical climate, we see that people don't actually care about either of those things. Quite the opposite, they are more than happy to burn books.
So what we can expect instead is that they'll care even less about a bunch of folks hitting the delete keys that wipe out several generations worth of historical record because it happens to be digital. If anything, they'll cheer about it.
It's just shy of it by the part where people rather than important information die; the structure of the argument is exactly the same. "We should do the thing we want to not have happen so much and to such a severe degree that people will finally get upset enough to want to stop us, but we better do it *a lot* because we know they won't care otherwise" is a truly idiotic argument to make when the thing you're doing can't be undone, and your goal is to not have it happen at all.
Whether it's information deletion or human deletion, you can't undo the damage you're doing, so what the hell are you talking about when you pretend it's something to consider?
Nah, people just need to wake up and start building own infra.
Everyone just waits for some white knight to pour money at infra
to backup stuff for them. No, DO sth usefull. In good old days
people used to have small web servers to host personal and friends webpages.
Yeah, it could not scale and your site could be DoSed, but thats another problem
with todays internet, noone gives a fuck up about abuse..
Anyway, layer your virtual Internet.. All the toys are here. VPNs (wireguard, OpenVPN, tinc-vpn, ...), Routing (Quagga, FRR, bird). Build infra, have fun.
Neat project is DN42, but they are more for testing and research.
We need more such networks for content, gaming and other interesting stuff.
I agree that the Internet Archive needs help, but I don't agree that it should get absorbed into the Library of Congress. Let's say it happens and now the LoC is running the IA. Others have already made the point that lobbyists and politicians can more easily erode its functionality much more easily and silently, and that's a good point. But what I fear the most is that it would mean the actual existence of the IA would be at the whim of congressional budget planning (which is frankly a shitshow) rather than being funded by those who actually CARE about it.
If you really want to help the Internet Archive survive, the very best thing any of us can do is donate directly to the IA so that they can afford good legal council to fight back against the music and book publishers who want to shut them down: https://archive.org/donate?origin=iawww-TopNavDonateButton
> If you really want to help the Internet Archive survive, the very best thing any of us can do is donate directly to the IA so that they can afford good legal council to fight back against the music and book publishers who want to shut them down
I thought you were going in a different direction until your last sentence. The IA needs donations to afford good counsel to advise them on the law before they make boneheaded decisions that put their mission in legal jeopardy. Preserving online content is one thing, "lending" in-print books is rather far from the core mission IMO. Even authors who are anti-DRM were outraged by the ill-advised lending scheme on book copies the IA didn't even pay for.
Paraphrasing Desmond Tutu: at some point, we have to stop continually rescuing people out of the river and go upstream to find out who keeps throwing them in there.
Lawyers, tax advisors, sales & marketing...all are "necessary" evils that would never exist in a perfect world. We should be looking for methods of limiting and discouraging the "need" for these professions wherever possible.
What are you gonna do, order them a pizza? Or are you suggesting people try to ruin their lives?
The lawyers and their families have done nothing illegal, unlike the IA who very well might have after being blinded by ideology. If the IA broke the law, or violated IP, copyright, etc than why should they not be taken to court?
"They were just doing their job" is not a response we accept when police and soldiers brutalize people. Why should it be the same for lawyers when they attack publicly accessible archives?
IMHO, publicly accessible archives can uplift large groups of the disadvantaged. Attacking them is equivalent to cutting public services for the poor.
The archives have to follow the laws and this isn't a case of the IA simply making a mistake, it was them intentionally crossing the line and assuming they'd get away with it.
I don't want the IA lost, but they are the ones responsible for their current legal situation.
Fwiw I wouldn't target the family of the police either, I think this targeting of innocent uninvolved people is sick.
Great idea. Or a state library in another country that has the same status.
The British Library, or hell, even the Lenin Library or whatever it's called these days.
And the author claims to have had 35 years in the industry so he should have some kind of intuition of when 30 years ago was. Or maybe he miscalculated 25 years experience.
Sounds at first listen like a way to make it easier to destroy the IA. If the LoC copies it and continues to archive the web, it would be a lot easier to make the argument in court that the IA wasn't even necessary.
The LoC would have no obligation to open up the archive to the public - maybe instead access would be provided through a single computer in a DC building after filling out a form, having that form approved, and they search you for thumb drives and take away your phone before you go in. Eventually the entire thing could be accidentally deleted, or the budget for it could be cut.
Somebody needs to save all of us from the control of the government and its justice system by corporate special interests.
I see IA used more and more frequently as a free file host for new copyrighted content (e.g., custom hacked up Windows ISOs), which is incredibly frustrating. Without changes, perhaps active curation like a normal library, I fear the site will get forced off the Internet soon.
I applied for a job at the Library of Congress once. By the time they got around to contacting me, I was already a couple of months into another job. Then my info got stolen in the USAJobs data breach. None of that is their fault per se, but it's a limitation of the position. You end up with people who want stability above all else. It actually could be a good thing for the Internet Archive which basically just needs to continue existing forever.
Can't the LOC start maintaining a copy of the Internet Archive? The IA should exist independently, but there's no reason we should keep the archive in one place.
Someone got rightly flagged for making a call for vigilantism. I'd like to respond to them in a non-flagged comment.
To the person apparently so frustrated that they were brainstorming vigilantism-- I'd suggest first at least trying the one thing that HN is allergic to-- getting engaged with politics. Few to none of the respondents here who are vaguely complaining about lobbyists (at the Library of Congress, of all places!) have any experience whatsoever organizing politically.
There is a pair-- literally, two humans-- who were able to get legislation passed in a state that is of general benefit to a) an industry where they weren't big players, and b) to society in general. They weren't oligarchs or billionaires or whoever HN thinks controls the keys to the kingdom. They were just interested and diligent enough to attempt the work. (Well, one of them had enough free time to go and meet with nearly every representative-- I'm not saying it's easy or quick.)
Think about the number of times a bugfix can fail to compile before you finally get it to work. If you apply that discipline and focus to find real, lasting legislative protections to projects like the IA or Sci-hub, you're way more likely to end up making positive changes than through vigilantism.
And of course if you're successful, HN will still criticize you for failing to solve the problem with a fast, homomorphically-encrypted, decentralized, statically-linked, non-Electron, portable executable. I guess you'll just have to accept the tragic ending that the most intelligent people in the world won't understand what you achieved. :(
I don't see how this applies here. This is a zero-sum game - you are fighting against the money of IP interests, and they have way more money than you. How would anything positive happen out of this?
Vigilantism is immoral, and is not likely to work, but that is still more plausible to do something than trying to out-spend large corporations in lobbying.
Or, move the whole operations to a country which doesn't give a damn about all of this, that's also a way of solving the lawsuit problems.
Politics is not decided by money. Money is a huge factor, and you can't do much without at least some money, but it's not the final word. Politics is determined in large part by how politicians read the mood of their voters, how they personally feel about an issue, and whether what the lobbyists are saying seems to make sense.
There is a grimy call center where politicians go to dial for dollars. Call books, now databases and dialing programs, filled with people of means, are used to connect people with money to politicians.
There are handlers too. People who make sure those calls get made.
The DNC, and likely the RNC, has a party quota, and that runs in addition to whatever getting reelected will require.
On those calls, everyone knows what needs to happen:
Those people of means need to be heard. They also want stuff to happen.
The politicians need dollars, favorable press, testimonials and help paying for staffers who take the incoming calls, faxes letters and whatever else comes in from the/ public. Those staffers often write laws and do research too.
The lobbies play off all that and are able to bring money and whatever else may make sense into the equation.
You are right in the strict sense of dollars not driving choices directly.
The system that does drive choices is packed to the gills with grift, old money, corruption, and in general, people of means and corporations driving most decisions.
Transactions called bribes, that are criminalized in much of the world, happen here daily!
We are among the most propagandized people in the world too.
I forget the study, but it basically showed how voters feel about an issue can count, except economic issues where we basically do not count in all but the most extreme sense.
My take after a good decade of activism and some access to this stuff is a fair bit less charitable.
And yes, we both miss the mark, and that is not good news.
The reality is likely more insidious and toxic to ordinary people.
you're right that it's usually not practical, but i just wanted to point out that a $30k lobbying budget can and has beat a $3M lobbying budget in some cases when there's enough public support. Money in politics is a huge deal and politicians in the US are corrupt as hell and yet somehow the previous sentence sometimes holds true, so all is not lost.
I guess philosophy and religion don't exist, then? Even children left to their own devices will form ideas about right and wrong, without any formal system needed.
The system (AKA government) can only control what is legal and illegal. Law is a religion of the ruling class. Many evil and wrong things have been committed in the name of Law, with consent of rules written by man. Innocents have died due to actions of the system. By that fact alone, it cannot be considered a moral entity, or to have a superior moral view of others, because it gets it wrong sometimes.
I forget the original quote, but it goes something like "One has a moral responsibility to disobey unjust laws." Laws are formalization of values, and if those values do not align with a healthy and fair society, they have no right to exist or be given credence. No entity is entitled to the domination or subjugation of another, be it government, family, or $DEITY.
>> There is a pair-- literally, two humans-- who were able to get legislation passed in a state that is of general benefit to a) an industry where they weren't big players, and b) to society in general.
What is this in reference to? Maybe I missed that part.
I can't tell if it's a matter of direct calls for vigilantism being against the TOS*, or a matter of comfortable people seeing the potential to get caught up in a shift towards that vigilantism, but flagged or not, I don't disagree with them. We allow for all kinds of preventative and punitive measures to be taken against people who cause harm to one, physically; I would argue that attacks on one's spiritual and intellectual well-being are similarly grievous. What the flagged comment calls for is, essentially, accountability for those who seek to deprive the public of cultural goods. You can go to jail for years for a single instance of robbery, and this is called accountability; but the law and norms say that to keep thousands from experiencing the enrichment of a particular piece of art, a substantive infringement of their human rights, deserves a six-figure salary. Civil disobedience is an ethical option.
Many posters are Americans, where gun ownership (to protect oneself from others with guns), big trucks (to protect oneself from other with big vehicles), and MAD are accepted facts of life. Personal harassment that disincentivizes antisocial behavior isn't radical, it's evolutionary.
*BTW, this is not one such direct call. It's a musing on its appropriateness. Feel free to rebut.
Personally I consider IA having all the eggs in basket unreasonably risky move. If IA did the basic sane segregation, the legitimate and truly valuable parts would not be facing such high existential risks. For example one way of dividing would be 1) wayback machine 2) public domain collections 3) non-pd collections 4) user-provided content. Having those firewalled into separate services and separate legal entities would protect 1) and 2) when its 3) and 4) that are drawing these attacks.
This lack of separation is also hurting IA in other ways; I think Wayback Machine and PD archives are really important and valuable, but right now I can not support or even endorse IA because their poor leadership playing with fire and putting those services under unnecessary risk.
106 comments
[ 3.3 ms ] story [ 179 ms ] thread1. An organization like LoC (or UN sponsored "government" organization) take over the Internet Archive. Let curators curate and conserve.
2. A discussion about reform of copyright, public domain, "intellectual property", incentivizing innovation, etc.
[EDIT] And while we're at it:
3. Let's also have a discussion about the legitimacy and desirability of tools and tricks used to enforce corporate lawyer whims (ie.: DRM, 20 page EULAs, cookie banners, terms of service, etc.)
We have been having that discussion in the courts for decades. The consensus is that the tools we have are at least part of why eight of the top ten global websites are run by American companies. To the extent you want to have a thriving marketplace to ply (what I assume is) your trade, these tools are at least desirable.
I do agree that the existence of law that supports these techniques is a choice, and that it’s entirely possible that avoidance of these techniques might win in the marketplace.
Might be some part of that. I suspect that "richest nation in the world" and "had widespread Internet access years ahead of anyone else" are larger parts.
> My thinking is that frequent partner The Library of Congress can put a stop to this by buying the Internet Archive. Make it a government body and protect all that digital content.
Congress passing a law saying it can't do X doesn't mean they can't just come back a few years later and decide to remove that rule, assuming its not unconstitutional.
1993 was 30 years ago not 40. I see no valid argument that there was any WWW in the early 1980s.
my thoughts on this are that it's a good idea, but it can't be the only solution. moving from a single point of failure to a more secure single point of failure is okay, but a better solution would be for the Library of Congress and similar public bodies around the world to be able to buy/obtain a copy of the archive and the protocols it uses to do the archiving. this would practically guarantee the permanency of the data and, if it was deemed legally viable, provide a decent revenue source
It's alway funny to see people suggest things the federal government should do without considering its deliberately limited nature and why that should go out the window with a constitutional amendment. This isn't the UK where we can just make up the law however we want. 10th amendment anyone? Enumerated powers?
Only to the extent that the library of congress is necessary and proper to regulating interstate commerce are its activities authorized. As soon as it strays from that, it must find another enumerated power with which to justify its actions. For instance, if the library of congress were to begin deporting illegal aliens, that would be incontrovertibly within the enumerated powers. To say nothing of the will of Congress.
A centralized copyright register is obviously something important to interstate commerce. Existing internet archives do not keep track of whose copyright is whose. So to transfer ownership of such a thing to the library of congress would not serve any copyright function related to interstate commerce. Surely even you can see that. So you're going to have to get real fucking creative, buddy!
Hundred year copyright is certainly too long, that is much longer than ideas are protected in a patent which costs far more in research and development.
Lawyers claim they own the copyright to Shakespeare because "someone has to make money off it."
Never compromise with cops, lawyers, or judges.
Read Shakespeare.
A great alternative is to build the Internet Archive so that after something is there "for a while", it is archived in a way that anyone can efficiently distribute it (thinking about long-term resiliency) and even survive a conspiracy to destroy it.
Both the history of takedowns of large private music trackers and the current state of Sci-hub show that nobody knows how to build such a thing.
There's a specific process for getting all of the content removed, and asking them to not archive the website.
For some ecommerce websites, they're removing copies from Internet Archive because there's pricing data that's getting archived.
I've also had clients remove copies because they've had a big problem with scrapers who are scraping the copies of the site in Internet Archive. They've been able to (mostly) stop scrapers on the site, but having archived copies of the site allows scrapers to scrape the Internet Archive.
Regardless, if you can prove you're the website owner, then Internet Archive will remove all of your content and stop archiving your site if you ask them.
This is the opposite approach of what I would consider a potential solution. The information should be stored in a system expensive enough to sabotage that no government will consider it. Data should be replicated as many times as possible and replicas should be as physically distributed as possible.
The system you describe doesn't exist. If it did then Sci-hub would already be using it. Instead, Sci-hub is subject to essentially the same risks of takedown as IA.
So instead of losing all the copyrighted content piece by piece we lose access to it all at once?
Someone needs to save the Internet Archives from the lawyers and I have an idea
More like someone needs to save the Internet Archive from Brewster Kahle. He and all of us knew the rules of the game: the IA was allowed to illegally host copyrighted content that wasn't making them money as long as it wasn't being exploited by the copyright holders and they paid lip service to IP law with things like controlled borrowing. Then they kicked the anthill with the emergency library. We pulled our hair out warning them not to and they did it anyway. Maybe their actions were morally justified but they were just so blisteringly stupid that it's hard not to feel betrayed.
Can't vote this enough. As flawed as the rules are, you know them. The rules should be changed, but you don't change them by blatantly breaking them in the most flagrant way possible.
All the guys who fantasize that they would have stopped at the perfect stopping point would have never started. You can run a mirror now. You can run a crawler now.
Heritrix is free software. The IA dump is retrievable. What's stopping you from making The Compliant Internet Archive? Nothing really except for the fact that none of the armchair quarterbacks have even seen what a ball looks like.
Why does this apply to Brewster Kahle and not, say, Elon Musk?
Lots of games, websites and TV shows would be gone. Let them.
Don't make local backups either. Or at least encrypt the backups and make sure they will be lost when we die.
*Let DRM and Copyright become the modern equivalent of book burning.*
Let people forget. Let it be the government's problem to preserve knowledge and history. And let it decide when the cost is higher than whatever benefits we get from strict authoritarian levels of Copyright protections
When the backlash happens, it's often already too late. But people are aware something was gone, that's why there is a backlash.
I know this because it happened in the past with the Cultural Revolution. Not saying it will happen in the same way here.
Maybe the only backlash we'll ever get is against my stupid comments. Lol.
When we look at the actual current US sociopolitical climate, we see that people don't actually care about either of those things. Quite the opposite, they are more than happy to burn books.
So what we can expect instead is that they'll care even less about a bunch of folks hitting the delete keys that wipe out several generations worth of historical record because it happens to be digital. If anything, they'll cheer about it.
Excuse me? Since when is shooting kids _just shy of_ deleting data. And no the rest of your comment doesn't pull that argument together.
Whether it's information deletion or human deletion, you can't undo the damage you're doing, so what the hell are you talking about when you pretend it's something to consider?
Yeah, it could not scale and your site could be DoSed, but thats another problem with todays internet, noone gives a fuck up about abuse..
Anyway, layer your virtual Internet.. All the toys are here. VPNs (wireguard, OpenVPN, tinc-vpn, ...), Routing (Quagga, FRR, bird). Build infra, have fun.
Neat project is DN42, but they are more for testing and research. We need more such networks for content, gaming and other interesting stuff.
That seems wildly optimistic.
If you really want to help the Internet Archive survive, the very best thing any of us can do is donate directly to the IA so that they can afford good legal council to fight back against the music and book publishers who want to shut them down: https://archive.org/donate?origin=iawww-TopNavDonateButton
I thought you were going in a different direction until your last sentence. The IA needs donations to afford good counsel to advise them on the law before they make boneheaded decisions that put their mission in legal jeopardy. Preserving online content is one thing, "lending" in-print books is rather far from the core mission IMO. Even authors who are anti-DRM were outraged by the ill-advised lending scheme on book copies the IA didn't even pay for.
Paraphrasing Desmond Tutu: at some point, we have to stop continually rescuing people out of the river and go upstream to find out who keeps throwing them in there.
The lawyers and their families have done nothing illegal, unlike the IA who very well might have after being blinded by ideology. If the IA broke the law, or violated IP, copyright, etc than why should they not be taken to court?
IMHO, publicly accessible archives can uplift large groups of the disadvantaged. Attacking them is equivalent to cutting public services for the poor.
Unfortunately, it is a response that we, collectively, mostly do accept.
We shouldn't, and occasionally we don't, but...
I don't want the IA lost, but they are the ones responsible for their current legal situation.
Fwiw I wouldn't target the family of the police either, I think this targeting of innocent uninvolved people is sick.
The LoC would have no obligation to open up the archive to the public - maybe instead access would be provided through a single computer in a DC building after filling out a form, having that form approved, and they search you for thumb drives and take away your phone before you go in. Eventually the entire thing could be accidentally deleted, or the budget for it could be cut.
Somebody needs to save all of us from the control of the government and its justice system by corporate special interests.
Can't the LOC start maintaining a copy of the Internet Archive? The IA should exist independently, but there's no reason we should keep the archive in one place.
To the person apparently so frustrated that they were brainstorming vigilantism-- I'd suggest first at least trying the one thing that HN is allergic to-- getting engaged with politics. Few to none of the respondents here who are vaguely complaining about lobbyists (at the Library of Congress, of all places!) have any experience whatsoever organizing politically.
There is a pair-- literally, two humans-- who were able to get legislation passed in a state that is of general benefit to a) an industry where they weren't big players, and b) to society in general. They weren't oligarchs or billionaires or whoever HN thinks controls the keys to the kingdom. They were just interested and diligent enough to attempt the work. (Well, one of them had enough free time to go and meet with nearly every representative-- I'm not saying it's easy or quick.)
Think about the number of times a bugfix can fail to compile before you finally get it to work. If you apply that discipline and focus to find real, lasting legislative protections to projects like the IA or Sci-hub, you're way more likely to end up making positive changes than through vigilantism.
And of course if you're successful, HN will still criticize you for failing to solve the problem with a fast, homomorphically-encrypted, decentralized, statically-linked, non-Electron, portable executable. I guess you'll just have to accept the tragic ending that the most intelligent people in the world won't understand what you achieved. :(
Vigilantism is immoral, and is not likely to work, but that is still more plausible to do something than trying to out-spend large corporations in lobbying.
Or, move the whole operations to a country which doesn't give a damn about all of this, that's also a way of solving the lawsuit problems.
There are handlers too. People who make sure those calls get made.
The DNC, and likely the RNC, has a party quota, and that runs in addition to whatever getting reelected will require.
On those calls, everyone knows what needs to happen:
Those people of means need to be heard. They also want stuff to happen.
The politicians need dollars, favorable press, testimonials and help paying for staffers who take the incoming calls, faxes letters and whatever else comes in from the/ public. Those staffers often write laws and do research too.
The lobbies play off all that and are able to bring money and whatever else may make sense into the equation.
You are right in the strict sense of dollars not driving choices directly.
The system that does drive choices is packed to the gills with grift, old money, corruption, and in general, people of means and corporations driving most decisions.
Transactions called bribes, that are criminalized in much of the world, happen here daily!
We are among the most propagandized people in the world too.
I forget the study, but it basically showed how voters feel about an issue can count, except economic issues where we basically do not count in all but the most extreme sense.
My take after a good decade of activism and some access to this stuff is a fair bit less charitable.
And yes, we both miss the mark, and that is not good news.
The reality is likely more insidious and toxic to ordinary people.
I'd say the belief that 'the system' is correct by default is more dangerous, mainly due to being rooted in dogma moreso than defensible reason.
The system (AKA government) can only control what is legal and illegal. Law is a religion of the ruling class. Many evil and wrong things have been committed in the name of Law, with consent of rules written by man. Innocents have died due to actions of the system. By that fact alone, it cannot be considered a moral entity, or to have a superior moral view of others, because it gets it wrong sometimes.
I forget the original quote, but it goes something like "One has a moral responsibility to disobey unjust laws." Laws are formalization of values, and if those values do not align with a healthy and fair society, they have no right to exist or be given credence. No entity is entitled to the domination or subjugation of another, be it government, family, or $DEITY.
What is this in reference to? Maybe I missed that part.
Many posters are Americans, where gun ownership (to protect oneself from others with guns), big trucks (to protect oneself from other with big vehicles), and MAD are accepted facts of life. Personal harassment that disincentivizes antisocial behavior isn't radical, it's evolutionary.
*BTW, this is not one such direct call. It's a musing on its appropriateness. Feel free to rebut.
This lack of separation is also hurting IA in other ways; I think Wayback Machine and PD archives are really important and valuable, but right now I can not support or even endorse IA because their poor leadership playing with fire and putting those services under unnecessary risk.