Jeremy Keith on the BBC’s planned online vandalism and destruction
Jeremy Keith on the BBC’s plans to—for no reason whatsoever—delete a whole bunch of websites:
Just to be clear, these sites aren’t going to be archived. They are going to be deleted from the web. Server space is the new magnetic tape.
This callous attitude appears to be based entirely on the fact that these sites occupy URLs in top-level directories—repeatedly referred to incorrectly as top level domains on the BBC internet blog—a space that the decision-makers at the BBC are obsessed with.
The BBC, of course, famously spent plenty of effort in the 1960s and 1970s trashing or deleting tapes, which of course hasn’t at all returned to haunt the corporation. Tapes cost money, and so the argument back then was stronger, but the BBC just nuking a load of websites that are just sitting there being informative, like the bastard knowledge-givers and memories-storage containers that they are, is bonkers. (Bye, 47000 unique World War Two memories that the public contributed—the BBC wants to delete you to appease the Tories and senior-level BBC management somehow!)
Keith adds:
I’m very saddened to see the BBC join the ranks of online services that don’t give a damn for posterity.
I agree wholeheartedly.
We should all club together and buy them a big pen drive.