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Lockheed Chosen For Electronic Records Archives

TrentL writes "How will we be able to read 1990's email messages in the year 2090? Will GIF files still be accessible in 2105? The US National Archives - tasked with preserving records "for the life of the republic" - has chosen Lockheed Martin to solve exactly this problem. Lockheed was awarded the $308M Electronic Records Archives contract after a year-long design competition. Full Disclosure: I worked on Lockheed's demo team."

3 of 282 comments (clear)

  1. Unconstitutional, unnecessary, and unacceptable! by dada21 · · Score: -1, Flamebait

    Is this even necessary? $308M is a lot of money (maybe not for our federal government, but for the average taxpayer) and this really seems to be a waste to tax and spend on a program that is better solved by private companies.

    Will we need old information in digital format? How many old books have we needed to save that were better saved just by reprinting them? How much information will the future need, and is it important to save just about everything just for memory sake?

    It just sounds like pork to me. Competitive pork, yes, but still pork. Our government has kept Lockheed afloat for decades.

    I'm trying to find out where in our Constitution does the Federal Government find an enumerated power to pay for this. It is outrageous -- there are numerous companies out there already attempting to archive old data. Why does our government even care? I bet it has more to do with raising taxes, creating new taxpayers to be paid on the government dole, and increasing unemployment figures.

    Similar to Hazlitt's Broken Window Fallacy, taxes are NOT good for creating wealth for the country. Instead, they create profit for certain select individuals and reduce wealth for everyone else.

    Our elected officials continue to finance deficit spending, which will only make us taxpayers and the next generations poorer.

  2. Let me guess... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: -1, Flamebait

    "Requires Windows Internet Explorer", right?

  3. What? Not Haliburton? by kvn · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    They must not have a digital archives division... ...yet.