The @internetarchive has rescued 490,000 of the music tracks @Myspace "accidentally" losthttps://www.engadget.com/2019/04/04/the-internet-archive-saved-tracks-lost-myspace/ …
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Mass deletions on sites like MySpace are a good reminder that, if a website you don't own is the only place where your creative work exists, you better have a back-up.
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Large media companies exist to serve shareholder interest, not the public's. Case in point: the thousands of films + TV episodes that exist in studio vaults that we will likely never see again — simply because they won't generate enough profit to make it worthwhile.
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For 30 years, VCR owners privately archived tons of content rights holders never saw fit to legitimately distribute. If not for
#YouTube postings, that stuff would be lost forever. Now that we've "evolved" to a no-hard-copy-recordings model, who will save the next 30 years?10 replies 54 retweets 105 likesShow this thread -
Replying to @willmckinley
I've seen things on youtube I never would have seen in a million years, and things I never would have known about.
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Replying to @terance2440
Same here. And most of what's there wouldn't be there without some individual taking the time and trouble to do it.
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Replying to @willmckinley
Yup. like
@thedonz5 he's been digitizing all the NBC Letterman shows. Which is my favorite show of all time. He has a youtube channel with the results of his hard work.1 reply 0 retweets 3 likes -
Replying to @terance2440 @willmckinley
Finished; finished digitizing all of the NBC Letterman shows. :)
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Thanks, Pope. :)
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