Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight
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Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight
Social marketing, PR insight & thought leadership - from The PR Coach
Curated by Jeff Domansky
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Scooped by Jeff Domansky
August 7, 2016 8:43 PM
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How an Archive of the Internet Could Change History

How an Archive of the Internet Could Change History | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

I left with an urgent curiosity about what sort of artifacts we would display a few decades from now, for future generations to discover. Our contemporary analogues to the personal notebook now live on the web — communal, crowdsourced and shared online in real time. Some of the most interesting and vital work I come across exists only in pixels. Tumblr, for example, contains endless warrens of critical theory about trans identity politics and expression, one of the few havens on the web where that sort of discourse exists. Many of the short videos on Vine feel as though they belong to an ever-­evolving, completely new genre of modern folk art. Some of the most clever commentary on pop culture and politics is thriving deep in hashtags on Twitter. Social media is as essential to understanding the preoccupations and temperature of our time as Haring’s notebooks were for his. But preserving materials from the internet is much harder than sealing them under glass.

Building an archive has always required asking a couple of simple but thorny questions: What will we save and how? Whose stories are the most important and why? In theory, the internet already functions as a kind of archive: Any document, video or photo can in principle remain there indefinitely, available to be viewed by anyone with a connection. But in reality, things disappear constantly. Search engines like Google continually trawl for pages to organize and index for retrieval, but they can’t catch everything. And as the web evolves, it becomes harder to preserve. It is estimated that 75 percent of all websites are inactive, and domains are abandoned every day. Links can rot when sites disappear, images vanish when servers go offline and fluctuations in economic tides and social trends can wipe out entire ecosystems. (Look up a blog post from a decade ago and see how many of the images, media or links still work.) Tumblr and even Twitter may eventually end up ancient internet history because of their financial instability....

Jeff Domansky's insight:

Very thoughtful article on what and how to preserve an archive of the Internet and its potential impact in the future.

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Scooped by Jeff Domansky
December 24, 2014 4:57 PM
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10 Search Engines That Couldn't

10 Search Engines That Couldn't | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it
It wasn’t long ago that the doors to the top of the search engine race were wide open. Before Google, Bing, and Yahoo! controlled almost all of search and advertising a host of unique search engine ideas were created. Some have survived, others acquired and shut down, and some ideas have resurfaced with the backing of a new century’s technology. Check out this winding tale of 10 search engines that just couldn’t make it.
Jeff Domansky's insight:

Feeling nostalgic about the internet? Take a little trip down memory lane and brief stories about 10 search engines that just couldn't stay in prime time. Recommended reading.  9/10

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Scooped by Jeff Domansky
July 31, 2016 3:26 AM
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This video of MTV explaining the internet in 1995 is everything

This video of MTV explaining the internet in 1995 is everything | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

Way back in the mid-90s, MTV was breaking their head about this weird new technology that was taking the world by storm — the Internet.


It’s hard to believe, but there was a time when people were still writing about the internet with a capital I, while using terms like ‘cybervoyagers’.


In 1995, they decided it was time to let their audience in on this hidden secret — and what better way to do it than by opening a can of celebrities?


Michael Jackson, David Bowie, Sandra Bullock, Ozzy Osbourne, Moby and — yes — Coolio, they’re all here for this amazing piece of nostalgia.


The wonders of virtual reality, where you can talk to someone pretending to be.. a penguin!...

Jeff Domansky's insight:

Nice bit of internet nostalgia.

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