- Sep 2024
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for - link rot - digital decay - internet is emphemeral - dead links - from - Verge article on digital decay and link rot
from - Verge article on Link Rot - https://hyp.is/n9nmpHdbEe-NPHOh3n31PA/www.theverge.com/2021/5/21/22447690/link-rot-research-new-york-times-domain-hijacking
for - digital delay stats - Pew Research
summary - That digital decay and link rot are digital facts of life means that annotating information on the page that is relevant for you to preserve is a good practice. - It may appear redundant but if that page disappears in the future, you will be glad you have preserved it in a place accessible to you - in your annotations!
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www.theverge.com www.theverge.com
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for - Link rot study - on NY Times archive - show how pervasive it is - stats - link rot - NY Times study - digital decay - link rot - internet is ephemeral - dead links
for - digital delay stats - Pew Research
summary - That digital decay and link rot are digital facts of life means that annotating information on the page that is relevant for you to preserve is a good practice. - It may appear redundant but if that page disappears in the future, you will be glad you have preserved it in a place accessible to you - in your annotations!
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The study looked at over 550,000 articles, which contained over 2.2 million links to external websites. It found that 72 percent of those links were “deep,” or pointing to a specific page rather than a general website. Predictably, it found that, as time went on, links were more likely to be dead: 6 percent of links in 2018 articles were inaccessible, while a whopping 72 percent of links from 1998 were dead.
for - stats - link rot - digital decay study - NY Times - 550,000 articles - 2.2 million links - 6% dead in 2018 articles - 72% dead in 1998 articles.
Tags
- Link rot study - on NY Times archive - show how pervasive it is
- internet is emphemeral
- stats - link rot - digital decay study - NY Times - 550,000 articles - 2.2 million links - 6% dead in 2018 articles - 72% dead in 1998 articles.
- dead links - research
- stats - link rot - NY Times study
- link rot
- digital decay
Annotators
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www.pewresearch.org www.pewresearch.org
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for - digital delay stats - Pew Research
summary - That digital decay and link rot are digital facts of life means that annotating information on the page that is relevant for you to preserve is a good practice. - It may appear redundant but if that page disappears in the future, you will be glad you have preserved it in a place accessible to you - in your annotations!
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tweets
for stats - digital decay - twitter -20% of tweets are no longer publicly visible 0ne month later
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23% of news webpages contain at least one broken link, as do 21% of webpages from government sites.
for - stats - digital decay - 23% of news webpages contain at least one broken link, - stats - digital decay - 21% of webpages from government sites contain at least one broken link
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A quarter of all webpages that existed at one point between 2013 and 2023 are no longer accessible
for - stats - digital decay - 25% of webpages that existed from 2013 to 2023 no longer exist as of Oct 2023
stats - digital decay - A quarter of all webpages that existed at one point between 2013 and 2023 are no longer accessible as of October 2023
Tags
- stats - digital decay - 21% of webpages from government sites contain at least one broken link
- digital delay stats - Pew Research
- stats - digital decay - 23% of news webpages contain at least one broken link,
- stats - digital decay - twitter -20% of tweets are no longer publicly visible 0ne month later
- - Indyweb - motivation for replicating information into your annotations - redundancy to protect against digital decay and link rot
- stats - digital decay - 25% of webpages that existed from 2013 to 2023 no longer exist as of Oct 2023
Annotators
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- Jul 2024
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www.youtube.com www.youtube.com
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TBR: Skill Decay
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- Aug 2023
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docdrop.org docdrop.org
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the Auto industry built for us and what's most Insidious is the financials behind all of this
- for: adjacency - urban decay, suburbs, history- suburbs, history - car culture, urban decay - economics
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paraphrase
- as the suburbs expanded they need more and more roads highways Bridges infrastructure to stay afloat
- but because the nature of the suburb is spread out single-family housing as opposed to the densely packed City Apartment dwelling the suburbs have too few people to be able to fund this infrastructure
- subsequently, they so they have to keep expanding in order to fund themselves and even then they still can't fund themselves
- so they often rely on tax dollars from City dwellers to subsidize their Suburban excesses
- who lives in the cities because of white flight ?... people of color
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when it comes to housing, people of color have been screwed over in literally every way in imaginable
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so we have this self-perpetuating cycle
- the growth of suburbs leads to more suburban sprawl
- this increases the need for cars
- this leads to the building of more highways and Roads
- this leads to not enough income to pay for the suburbs
- this leads to black and brown communities being forced to subsidize Suburban Lifestyles at the expense of the beautification of their own communities leading to the degradation of inner city neighborhoods
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- Sep 2022
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www.scientificamerican.com www.scientificamerican.com
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In a set of groundbreaking studies in 1932, psychologist Frederic Bartlett told volunteers a Native American legend about a young man who hears war cries and, pursuing them, enters a dreamlike battle that eventually leads to his real death. Bartlett asked the volunteers, who were non-Native, to recall the rather confusing story at increasing intervals, from minutes to years later. He found that as time passed, the rememberers tended to distort the tale's culturally unfamiliar parts such that they were either lost to memory or transformed into more familiar things.
early study relating to both culture and memory decay
What does memory decay scale as? Is it different for different levels of "stickiness"?
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- Apr 2021
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one.compost.digital one.compost.digital
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Can we reconfigure growth to mean richness in difference? Flourishing interdependent diversity of networks, network protocols and forms of interaction? What does this mean for digital decay, and can the decay of files, applications and networks become some form of compost, or what might be the most dignified form of digital death and rebirth?
Also see Apoptosis
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- Oct 2020
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doi.apa.org doi.apa.org
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Long-term effectiveness of inoculation against misinformation: Three longitudinal experiments. - PsycNET. (n.d.). Retrieved October 10, 2020, from /doiLanding?doi=10.1037%2Fxap0000315
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- Sep 2020
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Chen, Q., & Porter, M. A. (2020). Epidemic Thresholds of Infectious Diseases on Tie-Decay Networks. ArXiv:2009.12932 [Physics]. http://arxiv.org/abs/2009.12932
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- Aug 2016
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www.npr.org www.npr.org
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I wanted to record civil breakdown by degrees ... it's not all at once, it's not, you flip a switch and suddenly people are dog-eat-dog and regard everything in a Darwinian, animalistic way. I think that it starts subtly ... you walk into a restaurant and the maitre d' does not see you to your table, but just waves at it. Or doormen no longer carry groceries for the elderly. It's that little.
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- Mar 2016
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download.springer.com download.springer.com
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But there’s, I think there is a question of how you interpret the data, even ... ifthe experiments are very well designed. And, in terms of advice—not that I’mgoing to say that it’s shocking—but one of my mentors, whom I very muchrespect as a scientist—I think he’s extraordinarily good—advised me to alwaysput the most positive spin you can on your data. And if you try to present, like,present your data objectively, like in a job seminar, you’re guaranteed tonotgetthe job
Importance of "spinning" data
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