On Guerrilla Archives in the Disinformation Age - The Conversationalist

peter.suber's bookmarks 2026-05-06

Summary:

"The government is ultimately responsible for preserving a record of its own actions. But when federal agencies are unable to preserve all their data, or willfully choose not to, it begs the question if this work is best done by civil society and those outside of the government. Guerrilla archives—whether digital or analog like Stokes’—are generally nonpartisan acts of preservation to serve the public good. There’s the Internet Archive, which has been archiving the web and other cultural artifacts since 1996, and Vanderbilt Television News Archive, which provides the most comprehensive chronicling of evening television news broadcasts in the world. There’s also the End of Term Archive—one of the largest of these projects in progress—which downloads all government information at the end of each presidential term. It’s a grassroots alternative to the National Archives and Records Administration (NARA), which notoriously did not receive all of the presidential records from the first Trump administration in 2021 as mandated under the Presidential Records Act. (Trump promptly fired the head of NARA when he re-entered office in 2025.)"

Link:

https://conversationalist.org/2026/04/10/guerrilla-archives-activism-protest-history-preservation-politics-marion-stokes-media/

From feeds:

Open Access Tracking Project (OATP) » peter.suber's bookmarks

Tags:

oa.new oa.archives oa.preservation oa.censorship oa.data oa.harvard.u hu.oa oa.internet_archive

Date tagged:

05/06/2026, 13:34

Date published:

05/06/2026, 09:34