Preserving Digital Memory: Fighting Internet Decay Against Powerful Forces

The Fight for Digital Memory: Preserving the Internet’s Vanishing Past

Despite the adage “the internet never forgets,” the digital world is inherently fragile. Studies show that a significant portion of web content disappears over time, with nearly 25% of all web pages from 2013–2023 no longer accessible. Older content is even more vulnerable; over a third of pages from 2013 have vanished entirely. This digital decay is not merely a technical curiosity—it threatens historical record, political accountability, and cultural memory. From government-sanctioned deletions to server shutdowns by private companies, the online ecosystem is constantly at risk of losing information. When digital content vanishes, so does a fragment of our collective … Read more

Digital decay: The Internet Isn’t Forever

Digital decay: The Internet Isn’t Forever

Every few days, emails flood inboxes, asking about a vanished article, an unfindable blog, or a lost link. For researchers, educators, and readers alike, these inquiries often represent a frustrating search for information that no longer exists. These aren’t isolated incidents but symptoms of a larger phenomenon: the internet is eroding, with content disappearing at alarming rates. A recent Pew Research Center study on digital decay highlights the issue: nearly 38% of webpages accessible in 2013 are no longer accessible today. Websites vanish, URLs break, and entire digital ecosystems crumble, taking their knowledge and culture with them. This creates a … Read more