It operates on donations. It is constantly under litigation from the richest corporations on earth. It has no redundancy. If a meteor hits its San Francisco headquarters tomorrow, a massive chunk of human history—the tweets from the Arab Spring, the original GeoCities Angelfire pages, the old MS-DOS shareware—vanishes forever.
Long live the grim and evil Archive. Please send them a donation. They look like they need coffee. grim and evil archive.org
Publishers (Hachette, Penguin Random House, et al.) sued. Their argument was simple: Scanning a physical book you own and lending out a digital copy to the entire world at once is piracy. A federal judge largely agreed. It operates on donations
The "evil" here is that the Archive doesn't care about your license. It cares about the artifact. It is a digital necromancer, raising dead code from the grave and forcing it to dance. That is beautiful, but it is also grim . You are watching the rotting corpse of the early internet be preserved in formaldehyde. Have you ever tried to download a 90GB Linux distro via the Archive’s servers on a Tuesday afternoon? It moves slower than continental drift. If a meteor hits its San Francisco headquarters
It operates on donations. It is constantly under litigation from the richest corporations on earth. It has no redundancy. If a meteor hits its San Francisco headquarters tomorrow, a massive chunk of human history—the tweets from the Arab Spring, the original GeoCities Angelfire pages, the old MS-DOS shareware—vanishes forever.
Long live the grim and evil Archive. Please send them a donation. They look like they need coffee.
Publishers (Hachette, Penguin Random House, et al.) sued. Their argument was simple: Scanning a physical book you own and lending out a digital copy to the entire world at once is piracy. A federal judge largely agreed.
The "evil" here is that the Archive doesn't care about your license. It cares about the artifact. It is a digital necromancer, raising dead code from the grave and forcing it to dance. That is beautiful, but it is also grim . You are watching the rotting corpse of the early internet be preserved in formaldehyde. Have you ever tried to download a 90GB Linux distro via the Archive’s servers on a Tuesday afternoon? It moves slower than continental drift.