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Web Pages Are Weak Links in the Chain of Knowledge

PizzaFace writes "Contributions to science, law, and other scholarly fields rely for their authority on citations to earlier publications. The ease of publishing on the web has made it an explosively popular medium, and web pages are increasingly cited as authorities in other publications. But easy come, easy go: web pages often get moved or removed, and publications that cite them lose their authorities. The Washington Post reports on the loss of knowledge in ephemeral web pages, which a medical researcher compares to the burning of ancient Alexandria's library. As the board chairman of the Internet Archive says, "The average lifespan of a Web page today is 100 days. This is no way to run a culture.""

2 of 361 comments (clear)

  1. "This is no way to run a culture." by Cokelee · · Score: 1, Flamebait
    This is no way to run a culture.

    Tell the RIAA that.

    Music is a part of our culture.

  2. Throw stuff away when you're done with it. by lawpoop · · Score: 0, Flamebait
    I think 100 days is just about right for the life cycle of information. Why have stuff around if nobody wants it?

    Face it, the internet is about computers. Computers change so fast there isn't much worth hanging on to.

    --
    Computers are useless. They can only give you answers.
    -- Pablo Picasso