Digital preservation thoughts

This is seemingly part of WB pulling a bunch of Adult Swim Games games (which they now own in one of those cascading business buyout things). In an interviewwith Game DeveloperDeery called it “kind of depressing”, and said that “when you’re working with purely digital products nothing is going to stay around for very long.”

Warner Bros. are getting a bad rep for just wiping things off the face of the planet, with the headline-grabbing example of recent weeks beingCoyote Vs. Acme, an entire film that was finished and done, and will now never been seen by anyone. Digital preservation is a hotbutton issue for other reasons. Recently Kate Wagner wrotean incredible articleabout the power and wealth dynamics of F1, and the publication she wrote it for deleted it within hours, and hasn’tcome up with an explanation anyone really believes. With the closure of both Vice and now Rooster Teeth, I’ve seen people on Xitter reminding others to essentiallypreserve the content they likedbefore it disappears. But it’s been an issue with video games for a long time - apparently90% of classic games are critically endangered, as if we were talking about pandas, and a few years ago wenearly lost basically every classic Flash game.

Digitising entertainment means it is easier to download and share around but, like the money in my bank represented by a number on the screen, these things exist because enough people in charge agree that they should. If someone presses the delete key, it’s all gone, and the FBI agent who needs me to put 50k in cash in a shoebox is going to be shit out of luck. I’m really happy that Deery has been able to hold on to that game, which represents hours of effort and creativity that would otherwise have disappeared.

It feels like now, because the entities who have access to the delete button are solely concerned with profit, the onus for preservation is more and more on the collectiveus, and I’m not sure how well that’s going to go in the long term. For one thing, can we just back upeverything? But for another, when things like this disappear not many people notice, in part because it’s happening so much now. Thank godFred Durst was saved, at any rate, even if it was an accident.