by A Lily Bit November 04, 2024 from ALilyBit Website
isn't Making Headlines: An Overlooked Final Digital Assault on Free Speech...
If Archive.org, the steward of digital memory, succumbs to this darkness, we're witnessing not just an act of censorship but the onset of digital Alzheimer's.
This is a move towards
technocracy's dream where history
is not only written by the victors but is controlled, edited, and
deleted at will.
They sacrifice their vast audiences on the altar of visibility, because,
And it's not just about overt censorship anymore.
The real game is played with algorithms that manipulate searchability and visibility.
Navigating this labyrinth of censorship and its more insidious cousin, quasi-censorship, has become the modus operandi for alternative media.
It's not just about creating content; it's about
outsmarting a system designed to muffle dissent. This isn't freedom
of speech; it's a survival game where only the most cunning or the
most compliant thrive.
Here we are, staring at the gaping maw of history being rewritten - not by historians, but by the sudden silence of our digital guardians.
Imagine, if you will, a world where Archive.org, the guardian of internet history since 1994, has ceased its vigilant watch over the ebb and flow of online discourse.
Yes, for the first time in three decades, we've
entered an era where our digital past is not just forgotten; it's
being actively erased.
Since October 8-10, 2024, we've been living through a period where our collective memory is being held hostage.
Consider this:
Let's dive deeper into the 'trouble' at Archive.org.
A DDOS attack, they say, struck with surgical precision on October 8, 2024. Oh, how convenient that the guardians of our digital legacy can be so easily toppled by an influx of malicious traffic.
Now, the once vibrant Archive.org limps along as a read-only relic, showing us only what was, but not what is.
Isn't it poetic justice, or perhaps irony, that
the only institution tasked with chronicling our digital existence
now only reflects our past, leaving us blind to the present?
When the only mirror to the internet's soul is shattered,
So, here we stand, at the threshold of a 'new normal' where the internet, that vast expanse of human thought and action, has no memory of today.
Researchers, activists, journalists - indeed, anyone who cares about the integrity of information - have been stripped of the tools needed to scrutinize, compare, and challenge the powers that be.
Is this not a form of digital disenfranchisement?
It was the same with the World Health Organization (WHO) and its disparagement of natural immunity which was later changed.
We were able to document the shifting definitions
thanks only to this tool which is now disabled.
The standard approach to know who said what and when is now gone.
That is to say that the whole Internet is already
being censored in real time so that during these crucial weeks, when
vast swaths of the public fully expect foul play, anyone in the
information industry can get away with anything and not get caught.
Does Archive.org suspect something along those lines?
Here is what they say:
Oh, how quaint, a mere apology for the digital equivalent of burning the library at Alexandria.
Let's dissect this, shall we?
The orchestrated dismantling of the Internet's verifiable history isn't just a slip-up; it's a deliberate strategy, tailor-made for those who thrive in the shadows of power.
This isn't about stakeholder models:
The Declaration of the Future of the Internet isn't some benevolent blueprint for digital utopia - it's a blueprint for digital oligarchy where only the 'relevant authorities' and their chosen cronies dictate what's remembered and what's forgotten.
This multi-stakeholder approach?
To be sure, a librarian from Archive.org has the audacity to claim that,
Oh, how reassuring!
The fact that these materials aren't accessible now, when they could serve a democratic purpose, screams of a more sinister intent.
If the technology exists to make this information available, why isn't it?
Disturbingly, this erasure of Internet memory is not an isolated incident.
For years, Google provided a cached version of web pages - a time capsule of information integrity.
The timing is too perfectly aligned with the Archive.org crash to be "coincidental"...
Other disturbing trends are transforming,
The old web standard was refreshingly democratic:
But Google has abandoned this organic approach for a new, shadowy system where "trusted sources" are anointed by algorithms, not by the populace.
This shift is not just about improving search
quality - it's about controlling the narrative,
ensuring that only the voices deemed 'appropriate' by the tech
giants are heard.
Remember Alexa...?
This is how an entire generation of web technicians functioned.
The system was far from perfect, but it was transparent, user-driven, and functional. Now, with the original Alexa's tools gone, who decides what's relevant?
It's not just about what you can find online; it's about what you're allowed to find.
Where once there was a bustling marketplace of
ideas, we now have curated galleries where only the 'right' art is
displayed. If this is progress, then progress has a funny way of
looking like regression to me.
This wasn't a business decision; it was an
eradication. The ability to gauge a website's influence without
delving into costly, cumbersome alternatives was abruptly stripped
away.
The implications were clear:
Now, to understand the web's landscape, you'd
need to pay through the nose or navigate through proprietary mazes,
effectively putting control back into the hands of those who can
afford to pay for the privilege of information.
The Covid debacle of 2020-2023, marked by global censorship and a tidal wave of propaganda, didn't just accelerate this trend:
One wonders if anyone will recall the days of genuine digital freedom.
The deliberate sabotage of Archive.org, a digital library meant to preserve our collective memory, is a chilling testament to this new era:
As we stand now, weeks of web history have vanished into the void.
We're left guessing what's been lost, what narratives have been altered or disappeared entirely.
That's anyone's guess, with every passing day cementing the possibility that it might never return, leaving us with a history that ends abruptly on October 8, 2024.
|