COPYCENSE

Slate Profiles Brewster Kahle

"Search-engine wiz and dot-com multimillionaire Brewster Kahle founded the Internet Archive in 1996 with a dream as big as the bridge: He wanted to back up the Internet. There were only 50 million or so URLs back then, so the idea only seemed half-crazy. As the Web ballooned to more than 10 billion pages, the archive’s main server farm — hidden across town in a data center beneath San Francisco’s other big bridge — grew to hold a half-million gigabytes of compressed and indexed pages.

"Kahle is less the Internet’s crazy aunt than its evangelical librarian. Like it or not, the Web is the world’s library now, and Kahle doesn’t trust the guys who shelve the books. They’re obsessed with posting new pages, not preserving old ones. Every day, Kahle laments, mounds of data get purged from the Web: government documents, personal sites, corporate communications, message boards, news reports that weren’t printed on paper. For most surfers, once a page disappears from Google’s cache it no longer exists."

Paul Boutin. The Archivist. Slate. April 7, 2005.

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Written by sesomedia

04/09/2005 at 08:55

Posted in Web & Online