• PKscope@lemmy.world
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    8 days ago

    Tackling the problems that really matter. Good job, FBI.

    Fucking clowns.

  • rekabis@lemmy.ca
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    8 days ago

    The FBI is probably going nuts here because someone inadvertently archived the Epstein files and everyone at HQ is panicking. They need to purge it for the Internet before someone discovers that archived content, and so they’re using CP as an excuse.

      • Optional@lemmy.world
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        8 days ago

        So basically you need to spam me. Because a donation plea every so often . . .doesn’t get enough addresses to sell?

        I’m saying it’s a flawed implementation is all.

    • brbposting@sh.itjust.works
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      8 days ago

      Softest paywall ever - they do such good work, they can have an anonymous email of mine no problem

      Magic link’s so annoying though, just wanna password (they’re journalists not techies though is the long and short of it)

  • Knock_Knock_Lemmy_In@lemmy.world
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    8 days ago

    The archive runs Apache Hadoop and Apache Accumulo. All data is stored on HDFS, textual content is duplicated 3 times among servers in 2 datacenters and images are duplicated 2 times. Both datacenters are in Europe, with OVH hosting at least one of them.

    To avoid detection, archive.today runs via a botnet that cycles through countless IP addresses, making it quite difficult for grumpy webmasters to stop their sites getting scraped. Access to paywalled sites is through logins secured via unclear means, which need to be replenished constantly: here’s the creator asking for Instagram credentials. Finally, the serving of the website is also subject to a perpetual game of cat and mouse: “I can only predict that there will be approximately one trouble with domains per year and each fifth trouble will result in domain loss.” As of today, archive.today still works, but users are redirected to archive.md.

  • snoons@lemmy.ca
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    8 days ago

    Friends of tech Bros Incorporated.

    Regulatory capture is complete in the states.

  • dan1101@lemmy.world
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    7 days ago

    The news sites are trying to have it both ways. Serving the news articles to visitors and then covering them up with a paywall with browser tricks.

      • ITGuyLevi@programming.dev
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        7 days ago

        I would put that more on the ad networks, if the ads were related to the article, it may generate a few more clicks. The ads are completely random and built off a profile they assume would contain relevant info about me… but it doesn’t really seem to be accurate (this is kind of by my own choosing though).

        Instead articles about rebuilding cars should have ads related to perhaps rebuilding cars and not some fucking nutritional supplement or some other unrelated thing.

        • silence7@slrpnk.netOP
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          7 days ago

          Better ad targeting does make ads more valuable…but because only Google and Facebook have the visibility and ML to do it effectively, they wound up with all the ad revenue. Everybody else ended up with a few pennies

          • willington@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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            6 days ago

            Owners win.

            If I have a plot of land with some cherry trees on it, I can get a landless person to pick most of them for free.

            I make an offer “for every 100 pounds/kilos of cherries you pick for me, I’ll let you keep 1”. If the person who receives such an offer has no land of their own, they have to agree to avoid starvation.

            That’s why our system needs a huge class of the landless, resourceless, and assetless people. Then for the priveledge of touching a privatized resource you have accept the privateer’s conditions.

            Fencing off resources and protecting the fence by the threat of death is how this scam works.

            And it is impossible to fix this societal problem by simply trading more and better as an individual. The ruleset of the game is tuned for mass free energy extraction from the assetless class at the macro level.

  • Broadfern@lemmy.world
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    8 days ago

    That would explain why adguard’s public DNS started blocking it (labeled vaguely as “legal request”).

    • silence7@slrpnk.netOP
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      8 days ago

      They dont let sites opt-out, and they do a much more seamless job of enabling people to archive paywalled content

    • kazerniel@lemmy.world
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      7 days ago

      Wayback Machine lets you select snapshots in a calendar without thumbnails, which is better for navigating among a large number of snapshots, while Archive.today shows a chronological dump of thumbnails, which is better for noticing visible changes.

      Archive.today is better at getting through paywalls, the Wayback Machine doesn’t really do this.

      And while not a functional difference, but imho quite important: The Wayback Machine is ran by a 100+ employee non-profit registered in the USA, which lends it quite a bit of legal and financial stability, but also subjects it to official oversight/censorship, while Archive.today is ran by a single mysterious dude who carefully hides his identity, and we don’t know where the most of the site’s finances come from. (Edit: In one of the posts copied below he mentioned that he has some donations and ad revenue, but as of 2021 this covered less than 1/3 of the running costs.)

      Both financial security and resistance to censorship can be useful attributes to an online archive, but I have more trust in the Wayback Machine being online in 10 or 20 years, than Archive.today.


      Edit The archive.today owner has a few blog posts mentioning these kind of things:

      July 27, 2021:

      anonymous:
      Not respecting people’s privacy, copyright laws, or the veracity of content on your website… Please tell us more about how this archive isn’t being well managed and is doomed to die at any moment!

      archive-is:
      Of course, it is doomed to die at any moment (you should not have any illusions, as well as about the “veracity of content” on the Internet). The only idea is to hold back a little something that is doomed to die a little earlier. I hope that it is obvious after all the deplatforming dramas of the last months (disappearance of @realDonaldTrump, etc)

      August 13, 2021:

      anonymous:
      You said that before you die of old age you would implement a download zip of your whole site. That’s fine but links to archived pages will still be broken if you die if you don’t have someone to follow in your footsteps to maintain the site because the site will go offline or somebody will buy your expired domain name using it for another purpose. Do you have plans for someone to take over your site? I have thousands of archived pages, don’t want that work to go to waste.

      archive-is:
      I do not think there are many people willing to maintain such a project, which is also unprofitable. All 4½ projects over there - (IA, Archive.today, Megalodon.jp, half-suspensed WebCite, and paid Pinboard.in) look running on energy and money of a single person each and likely will be greatly changed or shutdown by the heirs.

      I could only advise to save everything locally to sync your documents with your own lifespan. Do not rely on clouds.

      daveymames:
      You don’t need many people mate, just a small amount of people is all that’s required. I for example would be willing to accept a passing of the torch. I would fund it with my own money and allow people to donate. I’m planning a site similar to Archive.org of my own that allows uploading via torrents so you can upload big files which is hard to do on archive.org and it bans people who don’t keep 1TB of stuff permanently seeded. This way I don’t need to waste money on storage.

      How much does hosting cost you per month at the moment?

      archive-is:
      about ~$2600/mo of pure expenses on servers/domains, not counting “work time”, “buying laptop/furniture”, etc. ($100…300/mo covered by donations + $300…500 by ads)

      I’d suggest starting with pdf/djvu archive:

      • It is of demand: people here often ask about archiving pdf/djvu and are particularly interested in archiving from another website rather than uploading (for some vague legal reasons).

      • Unlike archive.is, it is more a blob storage and fit to “store me a terabyte” model: there is no need to develop and support own file formats and its renderers.

      • There is a ready-made dataset to rescue and get some press attention on: Sci-Hub.

      • The mission is more about “save forever“ than our “keep a page online after the original took down or altered“.

      archive-is:
      Also, https://docs.softwareheritage.org/ is a storage-heavy initiative which would need extra mirrors and crawlers. I need it as a user, especially immutable weekly snapshots of whole language repositories (such as maven.apache.org, npmjs.com, crates.io, …)

      January 28, 2022:

      anonymous:
      Do you have anything prepared for the fate of the archive in the event of your death?

      archive-is:
      It is an overly optimistic assumption that there will be no risks before I die. Many projects (including at least two in this area: peeep.us and webcitation.org) stopped working long before the death of the people behind them. Many projects pivoted following the money. In addition, there are many critical points (e.g., domains) that I have no control over.

      • NateNate60@lemmy.world
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        7 days ago

        If I had to guess this guy (or girl) is a Bitcoin millionaire or something. But that’s just based on the vibes of his speech with no concrete basis.

  • NGC2346@sh.itjust.works
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    8 days ago

    If it’s someone operating from Russia, they can beat it and get lost, because it won’t disappear.