archivist

joined 2 months ago
MODERATOR OF
 

Dr. Brad Hafford shares his thoughts about modern and pencil-and-paper methods of recording archaeological data.

 

cross-posted from: https://lemm.ee/post/60191746

It’s a creative act to find and make sense of my own history, one that requires a leap of faith in order to fill in the silences, erasures, omissions, and genuine mysteries that old books and documents, records and artifacts, represent. A lot is left to the imagination. Much of what survives from the past asks more questions than we can answer. This is true for queer and trans archival traces, as it is for other aspects of humanity that are poorly accounted for in public records, or actively discriminated against through surveillance and omission in equal parts.

 

It’s a creative act to find and make sense of my own history, one that requires a leap of faith in order to fill in the silences, erasures, omissions, and genuine mysteries that old books and documents, records and artifacts, represent. A lot is left to the imagination. Much of what survives from the past asks more questions than we can answer. This is true for queer and trans archival traces, as it is for other aspects of humanity that are poorly accounted for in public records, or actively discriminated against through surveillance and omission in equal parts.

1
Roblox Assets Archival [New Project] (tracker.archiveteam.org)
submitted 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago) by archivist@lemm.ee to c/archiveteam@lemm.ee
 

I don't think there's info about this one on the wiki yet: https://wiki.archiveteam.org/index.php/Roblox

Looks like it will be done pretty quickly, as it was set to be the default project for warriors.

1
submitted 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago) by archivist@lemm.ee to c/archiveteam@lemm.ee
 

The archival started not long before the site was to be shut down, so there wasn't time to grab everything.

When the owners finally pulled the plug, blog posts started returning a 403 error, then later 410 errors. Images and javascript files remained downloadable for longer, but the JS files started returning 410 after a while as well. Images were still available for quite a bit longer.

Today, only so-called "tag" items were being archived, possibly because we ran out of known images, or the team sniffed out that those were still available and valuable.

The last item my warrior grabbed was a tag item at 2025-04-02T10:39:21.085891703Z

8M-14M known items are left unarchived, presumably many more millions not yet discovered.

1
deleted (lemm.ee)
submitted 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago) by archivist@lemm.ee to c/archaeology@mander.xyz
 

Ukrainian soldiers digging defensive fortifications stumbled upon an ancient Greek burial site in southern Ukraine.

Archived: archive.org, archive.ph

4
SS Blog [New Archival Project] (tracker.archiveteam.org)
submitted 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago) by archivist@lemm.ee to c/datahoarder@lemmy.world
 

cross-posted from: https://lemm.ee/post/60023388

Archive Team has just begun the distributed archiving of the Japanese SS Blog, a blog hosting service, which is set to be discontinued on March 31, 2025.

And you can help! There isn't much time left, so as many people running the warrior as possible is needed.

Resources:

  • The wiki page of the project (not much info)
  • The tracker (at the top of the page) has the simplest info on how you can help out
  • The github page offers a docker-based alternative for advanced users, and more info on best practices for this sort of archiving

Why help out?

The web is disappearing all the time, and often a lot of previously easily accessible information is lost to time. These japanese blogs may not be very important to you, but they certainly are to a lot of people, and nobody knows what sort of information is found only here, until they need it.

4
SS Blog [New Archival Project] (tracker.archiveteam.org)
submitted 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago) by archivist@lemm.ee to c/datahoarder@lemmy.ml
 

cross-posted from: https://lemm.ee/post/60023388

Archive Team has just begun the distributed archiving of the Japanese SS Blog, a blog hosting service, which is set to be discontinued on March 31, 2025.

And you can help! There isn't much time left, so as many people running the warrior as possible is needed.

Resources:

  • The wiki page of the project (not much info)
  • The tracker (at the top of the page) has the simplest info on how you can help out
  • The github page offers a docker-based alternative for advanced users, and more info on best practices for this sort of archiving

Why help out?

The web is disappearing all the time, and often a lot of previously easily accessible information is lost to time. These japanese blogs may not be very important to you, but they certainly are to a lot of people, and nobody knows what sort of information is found only here, until they need it.

1
SS Blog [New Archival Project] (tracker.archiveteam.org)
submitted 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago) by archivist@lemm.ee to c/archiveteam@lemm.ee
 

Archive Team has just begun the distributed archiving of the Japanese SS Blog, a blog hosting service, which is set to be discontinued on March 31, 2025.

And you can help! There isn't much time left, so as many people running the warrior as possible is needed.

Resources:

  • The wiki page of the project (not much info)
  • The tracker (at the top of the page) has the simplest info on how you can help out
  • The github page offers a docker-based alternative for advanced users, and more info on best practices for this sort of archiving

Why help out?

The web is disappearing all the time, and often a lot of previously easily accessible information is lost to time. These japanese blogs may not be very important to you, but they certainly are to a lot of people, and nobody knows what sort of information is found only here, until they need it.

 

In late February, members of the DWeb Core Team and the DWeb community were in Taipei to attend the 13th edition of RightsCon, the largest global summit on human rights in the digital age. Namely, we were there to connect with the digital rights community. We wanted to participate in an event where thousands of people travel from around the world to discuss the current and future state of the internet, and to meet others who were involved in building decentralized, distributed, and peer-to-peer network technologies.

view more: ‹ prev next ›