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Tag: Internet Archive

  • Deleted Politician Tweets Site, Which Twitter Blocked, Now Preserved on Internet Archive

    When Twitter decided to kill API access to Politwoops and Diplotwoops, sites the archived the deleted tweets of politicians across the world, it was a pretty big blow to transparency.

    “Imagine how nerve-racking – terrifying, even – tweeting would be if it was immutable and irrevocable? No one user is more deserving of that ability than another. Indeed, deleting a tweet is an expression of the user’s voice,” said Twitter in defense of its decision.

    Despite the protests of dozens of rights groups, Twitter stuck by its decision. Twitter blocked the US version of Politwoops on May 15, and the final blow came in August when it shut the operation down in Argentina, Australia, Canada, Chile, Croatia, Denmark, Portugal, Egypt, Estonia, France, Greece, India, Ireland, Italy, South Korea, Macedonia, Norway, Belgium, United Kingdom, Germany, The Netherlands, Sweden, Spain, Switzerland, Tunisia, Turkey and the Vatican.

    You might not be able to track newly-deleted tweets from the world’s top politicians – but you can now search through all the old ones. Open State Foundation has announced that it has uploaded the entire Politwoops archive to the Internet Archive.

    Here you’ll find all 1,106,187 deleted tweets from 10,404 politicians across 35 countries.

    ‘Social networks should take into account international norms about transparency and the right to information’, says Arjan El Fassed, director of Open State Foundation. ‘When politicians turn to social networks to amplify their views, they are inviting greater scrutiny of their expression’.

    Earlier this month, human rights and transparency groups penned an open letter to Twitter asking it to restore Politwoops’ API access.

    “Twitter’s reasoning conflates transparency and accountability with privacy. We agree that when users decide to delete tweets they are engaging in expression—but add that the public has a compelling interest in the expression of public officials. Recognizing this public interest, courts have long held that public officials do not receive the same treatment for privacy. Further, when public officials use Twitter to amplify their political views, they invite greater scrutiny of their expression. Journalists and civil society utilize tools like Politwoops to understand the views and commitments of the people these politicians represent—and the politician or candidate’s own intents and perspective. In this case, the citizen’s right to freedom of expression —which includes access to information—outweighs the official’s right to a retroactive edit,” wrote the groups, which include the Electronic Frontier Foundation, Human Rights Watch, and Fight for the Future.

  • Internet Archive Launches Internet Arcade

    The Internet Archive at archive.org, which has given us great things like the Wayback Machine, has launched the Internet Arcade, a web-based library of arcade games from the 70s, 80s and 90s. You can play these for free right from your browser. There’s like 900 of them beginning with The Three Stooges in Brides is Brides.

    We’re talking Pac-Man, Tiger-Heli, Street Fighter 2, Q*Bert, Ghouls & Ghosts, Pitfall II, Paperboy, OutRun, Monster Bash, Millipede, Return of the Jedi, Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom, Galaga, Frogger, Bionic Commando, and many, many more.

    A message on the site says:

    The game collection ranges from early “bronze-age” videogames, with black and white screens and simple sounds, through to large-scale games containing digitized voices, images and music. Most ga mes are playable in some form, although some are useful more for verification of behavior or programming due to the intensity and requirements of their systems.

    Many games have a “boot-up” sequence when first turned on, where the systems run through a check and analysis, making sure all systems are go. In some cases, odd controllers make proper playing of the systems on a keyboard or joypad a pale imitation of the original experience.

    Now set aside some time in your schedule to kill hours and hours of your life trying to relive your past. Seriously, you should probably set aside a few hours for Paperboy alone.

    Image via archive.org

  • Over 1 Million Classic Films And Books Are Now Available On BitTorrent

    There is a lot of human culture that gets lost as history marches onward. Some of that history is extremely important for the continued advancement of our species. There are thousands of books, photos and films that have been discarded, but there’s one warrior who fights to keep it alive.

    The Internet Archive, a wonderful place to find everything from the public domain, has collected its material and published it on BitTorrent. That’s over one million files including “live music concerts, the Prelinger movie collection, the librivox audio book collection, feature films, old time radio, lots and lots of books” and some stuff from the community.

    If you’re unfamiliar with the Internet Archive, all of this content is completely free and within the public domain. There is some content that companies protect long after its copyright has faded through extension laws (see Mickey Mouse), but the majority of old film and radio is now completely free through the public domain.

    The Internet allows us to preserve these old recordings and writings in a way that was never possible before. While the physical media on which these films and books were originally recorded slowly decays, the Internet makes sure that they stay around for as long as the Internet is around.

    The move to BitTorrent is especially important because the Internet Archive now relies on its users to help spread the content that’s available. On top of the new servers that the Internet Archive will be using to share this content, other users will also be contributing to the seeding of said content. It will be the definitive way to gain access to everything that the Internet has to offer.

    You can start looking through the all the knowledge contained in the torrents here. Some of the old propaganda films from World War II are simply hilarious. You should definitely check them out.

  • The Internet Archive Needs Your Help

    The Internet Archive Needs Your Help

    Just because a site is free to use and features a comprehensive database of accessible content doesn’t mean they don’t need money to keep going. In fact, the opposite is true.

    Just ask the Internet Archive.

    Much like Wikipedia, the folks at Archive.org are also looking for funding, but they aren’t going about it with creepy images of editors that stare at you for the duration of your visit. Sure, there are prompts over at the Internet Archive asking people to donate, but the manner in which they go about asking isn’t anywhere near as intrusive as other sites. To put it another way, the way in which the Internet Archive is asking for donations has not become a Reddit meme where people poke fun at the monetary requests.

    While I mention bandwidth in the article’s lede, it’s not the only reason for the donation requests, something the Internet Archive blog post reveals quite well:

    In the last year, the number of people using the Internet Archive has increased to two million people every day, and our collections of free books, music, video, and web pages have also grown by twenty to twenty-five percent. This is great news, but we are doing it all on a shoestring budget.

    This year we need your help.

    The word “help” is linked and when clicked, visitors are taken to a donation page where you can contribute as much or as little as you can. Considering the role the Internet Archive provides, asking for a little funding is perfectly acceptable, especially for a site/service that offers this description as its primary goal:

    We digitize books, collect video, music and the World Wide Web, and take contributions of digital media from anyone who would like their materials preserved.

    We provide access to these vast collections to millions of people each day. All for free. {Emphaisis added]

    So yeah, asking for donations to keep bringing such content to the masses is understandable, especially when the service is free. With that in mind, perhaps Archive.org could look into official sponsorship, or, who knows, maybe sell themselves to Google or Microsoft. Considering their massive amount of content, there could be some great opportunities for targeted advertisements.

    If you’d like to donate to the Internet Archive’s cause, you can do so here.

  • Internet Archive Offers 1 Million Books To Visually Impaired

    The Internet Archive said today it has made available more than 1 million books to those who are blind, dyslexic and visually impaired.

    Brewster-Kahle "Every person deserves the opportunity to enhance their lives through access to the books that teach, entertain and inspire," said Brewster Kahle, founder and Digital Librarian of the Internet Archive.

    "Bringing access to huge libraries of books to the blind and print disabled is truly one of benefits of the digital revolution."

    The more than 1 million books in the Internet Archive’s library for print disabled, are scanned from hard copy books then digitized into DAISY, a specialized talking book format used by blind or others with disabilities.

    Kahle also said the Internet Archive will be investing in the growth of its virtual library by funding the digitization of the first 10,000 books donated. Anyone can donate their favorite book or collections of books. Books in all languages are accepted.

    Older books will be made available to qualified users who are registered with the Library of Congress’ National Library Service for the Blind and Physically Handicapped (NLS). . Currently, over 800,000 people in the US are registered with the Library of Congress as being print disabled.

    The Internet Archive said it will continually increase the number of books it makes available. It is currently seeking donations of books and ebooks from individuals, libraries and publishers.

    "This demonstrates why having open and public access to published works is so important," said Kahle.