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Vint Cerf: Data That's Here Today May Be Gone Tomorrow

dcblogs writes "Vinton Cerf is warning that digital things created today — spreadsheets, documents, presentations as well as mountains of scientific data — may not be readable in the years and centuries ahead. Cerf illustrates the problem in a simple way. He runs Microsoft Office 2011 on Macintosh, but it cannot read a 1997 PowerPoint file. 'It doesn't know what it is,' he said. 'I'm not blaming Microsoft,' said Cerf, who is Google's vice president and chief Internet evangelist. 'What I'm saying is that backward compatibility is very hard to preserve over very long periods of time.' He calls it a 'hard problem.'" We're at an interesting spot right now, where we're worried that the internet won't remember everything, and also that it won't forget anything.

3 of 358 comments (clear)

  1. Re:emulation / virtualization by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    You're very clever, young man, very clever - but it's VMs all the way down!

  2. Uh, hello? by DogDude · · Score: 4, Funny

    For a supposedly smart guy, he seems a bit silly:

    He could've just downloaded MS's Powerpoint 97 viewer

    --
    I don't respond to AC's.
  3. Re:XML? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    Holy shit, yeah, you're right - it's totally impossible to strip out the XML tags and be left with readable plain text content!

    I bet nobody could ever decode it!