I thought Archive just removed access, but kept the content. I know that from a user perspective that is a distinction without a difference, but for posterity it matters.
Does anyone have any facts/citations on if this is a myth/coping mechanism I created, or reality?
“2023 The Internet Archive, a non-profit research library, makes use of internal processes and tools, including human review and hash-matching, as well as reports from external parties to identify, disable access to, and limit the reappearance of illegal and/or proscribed violent extremist material on archive.org”
This is not to disparage the tremendous work done and being done by the IA, it's more of me lamenting the trend of our society and societies to mentally babysit people lest their mind gets exposed to something bad, with the implicit assumption that adult humans can't be trusted to see some stupid bs and react with "that was some stupid bs. I am moving it into the stupid bs bucket of things I know about".
In the past, they stated that they do not delete anything. Those posts have vanished, possibly due to the onslaught of lawsuits and discovery. Specific to Kiwi Farms (and some other material) I was able to locate it by poking around on the site. Even the material that the Judge ruled against in the Hachette lawsuit remains online and available to people with print disabilities.
I did this before the pandemic for a "real" K8s environment (history is 20/20, but this rocked for what I needed then).
Basically a super inexpensive and tiny i7-4600U laptops w/o display that I upgraded to 16GB of RAM and 256 SSDs. I still run a smaller fleet for different services and testing - both standalone and as part of a Proxmox cluster.
I donated to Mr. Chromebox for years, super awesome work.
Does anyone have any facts/citations on if this is a myth/coping mechanism I created, or reality?