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38% of webpages from 2013 have disappeared from the Internet

Discussion in 'BBS Hangout' started by Ubiquitin, May 20, 2024.

  1. Ubiquitin

    Ubiquitin Contributing Member
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    I hate when we get a good necrobump and all the links in the post are dead.
    This is a running theme of posts for me, but it's also telling that so much of the web is gone.

    ALSO -- it's damn near impossible to search and find a video you've seen in passing on one of those algorithm generated feeds.

    https://www.pewresearch.org/data-labs/2024/05/17/when-online-content-disappears/

    When Online Content Disappears
    38% of webpages that existed in 2013 are no longer accessible a decade later
    BYATHENA CHAPEKIS, SAMUEL BESTVATER, EMMA REMYANDGONZALO RIVERO
    How we did this
    The internet is an unimaginably vast repository of modern life, with hundreds of billions of indexed webpages. But even as users across the world rely on the web to access books, images, news articles and other resources, this content sometimes disappears from view.

    A new Pew Research Center analysis shows just how fleeting online content actually is:

    • A quarter of all webpages that existed at one point between 2013 and 2023 are no longer accessible, as of October 2023. In most cases, this is because an individual page was deleted or removed on an otherwise functional website.
    [​IMG]
    • For older content, this trend is even starker. Some 38% of webpages that existed in 2013 are not available today, compared with 8% of pages that existed in 2023.
    This “digital decay” occurs in many different online spaces. We examined the links that appear on government and news websites, as well as in the “References” section of Wikipedia pages as of spring 2023. This analysis found that:

    • 23% of news webpages contain at least one broken link, as do 21% of webpages from government sites. News sites with a high level of site traffic and those with less are about equally likely to contain broken links. Local-level government webpages (those belonging to city governments) are especially likely to have broken links.
    • 54% of Wikipedia pages contain at least one link in their “References” section that points to a page that no longer exists.
    To see how digital decay plays out on social media, we also collected a real-time sample of tweets during spring 2023 on the social media platform X (then known as Twitter) and followed them for three months. We found that:

    • Nearly one-in-five tweets are no longer publicly visible on the site just months after being posted. In 60% of these cases, the account that originally posted the tweet was made private, suspended or deleted entirely. In the other 40%, the account holder deleted the individual tweet, but the account itself still existed.
    • Certain types of tweets tend to go away more often than others. More than 40% of tweets written in Turkish or Arabic are no longer visible on the site within three months of being posted. And tweets from accounts with the default profile settings are especially likely to disappear from public view.
     
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  2. heypartner

    heypartner Contributing Member

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  3. DonkeyMagic

    DonkeyMagic Contributing Member
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    Probably not a bad thing.
     
  4. Jontro

    Jontro Member

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    bring back the old internets!
     
  5. B-Bob

    B-Bob "94-year-old self-described dreamer"

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    Except for OCP.
     
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  6. Scarface281

    Scarface281 Contributing Member

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    Look at that sharp ass decline starting in 2020. It's almost as if... nevermind this isn't the D&D section
     
    Ubiquitin likes this.
  7. daywalker02

    daywalker02 Member

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    I had the habit of using bookmark pages.

     
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  8. CCorn

    CCorn Member

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    The internet is turning into Ohio.
     
  9. Jontro

    Jontro Member

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    so did they lie when they said once your stuff is on the internet it's there forever?
     
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  10. Invisible Fan

    Invisible Fan Contributing Member

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  11. cheke64

    cheke64 Member

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  12. heypartner

    heypartner Contributing Member

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    Why doesn’t Wikipedia have AI find new references for all their broken links. And where it can’t find a new reference insert [citation needed]?

    Come on Wikipedia, grow up!
     
    Ubiquitin likes this.
  13. Xerobull

    Xerobull You son of a b!tch! I'm in!

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  14. B-Bob

    B-Bob "94-year-old self-described dreamer"

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    Web pages aside, data impermanence would surprise most people. I read once that half the Apollo program data reels are missing, and never mind how increasingly difficult it is to read and transfer the half we still have in safe keeping.
     
  15. ima_drummer2k

    ima_drummer2k Contributing Member

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    Makes all those old Summer of YoYao threads unreadable.
     
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  16. Jugdish

    Jugdish Member

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    ROCKSS and B-Bob like this.
  17. droxford

    droxford Member

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    Wow! So... the internet is going to forget my personal information and history, then? [/sarcasm]
     
  18. boomboom

    boomboom I GOT '99 PROBLEMS
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    Ubiquitin likes this.
  19. Jontro

    Jontro Member

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    wait is it 38% only from 2013 or from 2013 and below? cus then that's like data from 1996 or whenever al gore created the internets (was the internets around in 1996?)
     
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  20. Jugdish

    Jugdish Member

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    Yes.
     
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