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Billion Year Storage Media

Thorfinn.au writes "Even though the data density of digital information storage has increased tremendously over the last few decades, the data longevity is limited to only a few decades. If we want to preserve anything about the human race which can outlast the human race itself, we require a data storage medium designed to last for 1 million to 1 billion years. In this paper a medium is investigated consisting of tungsten encapsulated by silicon nitride which, according to elevated temperature tests, will last for well over the suggested time."

204 comments

  1. Nice atomic structure by nospam007 · · Score: 5, Funny

    But as we know, you can't trust atoms.
    They make up everything.

    1. Re:Nice atomic structure by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, we do all know. We learned it in elementary school.

    2. Re:Nice atomic structure by ebno-10db · · Score: 1

      Is there a name for a joke that's so bad, it's good?

    3. Re: Nice atomic structure by AvitarX · · Score: 1

      A pun

      --
      Wow, sent an e-mail as suggested when clicking on "use classic" banner, and got a fast response that addressed my msg
    4. Re:Nice atomic structure by JustOK · · Score: 1

      How many atoms in a quark?

      --
      rewriting history since 2109
    5. Re:Nice atomic structure by Crudely_Indecent · · Score: 4, Funny

      That's like asking how many insane asylums are in a crazy person...

      --


      "Lame" - Galaxar
    6. Re:Nice atomic structure by Trouvist · · Score: 1

      Not enough.

    7. Re:Nice atomic structure by bobbied · · Score: 1, Interesting

      I knew a lady who had a therapist and a nurse in her list of personalities. She could lock herself up for treatment..

      But I get your point...

      --
      "File to fit, pound to insert, paint to match" - Aircraft Maintenance 101
    8. Re:Nice atomic structure by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      For those who don't know, or aren't compelled to look it up -

      Quarks are the pieces that make up protons and neutrons. There aren't any atoms in a quark, but there are many quarks in an atom. The number of quarks depends on the weight of the atom (protons + neutrons). But what about electrons? They're made of leptons and pixie vomit.

    9. Re:Nice atomic structure by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How many atoms in a quark?

      How many Quarks in a previously owned Deep Space Station?

    10. Re:Nice atomic structure by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I knew a lady who had a therapist and a nurse in her list of personalities. She could lock herself up for treatment..

      But I get your point...

      You said you weren't going to tell anyone about me, them.

    11. Re: Nice atomic structure by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      A really good pun is never outgroaned.

    12. Re:Nice atomic structure by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > How many atoms in a quark?

      At least 10 Libraries of Congress' worth.

    13. Re: Nice atomic structure by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      fail. a pun has distinct criteria, of which this joke lacked entirely.

    14. Re:Nice atomic structure by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "pun"

    15. Re:Nice atomic structure by bobbied · · Score: 1

      I knew a lady who had a therapist and a nurse in her list of personalities. She could lock herself up for treatment..

      But I get your point...

      You said you weren't going to tell anyone about me, them.

      To which of you did I make that promise?

      --
      "File to fit, pound to insert, paint to match" - Aircraft Maintenance 101
    16. Re:Nice atomic structure by davidcoble · · Score: 1

      "They make up almost everything" lacks a certain je ne sais quois.

    17. Re:Nice atomic structure by JustOK · · Score: 1

      I don't know what je ne sais quois means

      --
      rewriting history since 2109
    18. Re:Nice atomic structure by oreiasecaman · · Score: 1

      I don't know what je ne sais quois means

      Don't worry, I can help you: http://lmgtfy.com/?q=je+ne+sais+quois&l=1

      --
      This is a UDP joke, I don't care if you get it or not...
    19. Re:Nice atomic structure by JustOK · · Score: 1
      --
      rewriting history since 2109
    20. Re:Nice atomic structure by oreiasecaman · · Score: 1

      lol now I've understand it :)

      --
      This is a UDP joke, I don't care if you get it or not...
  2. what about the data format? by gmack · · Score: 4, Insightful

    That's nice and all but can we trust our data formats to stay static for that long? Having the data but being unable to open it seems rather useless to me.

    1. Re:what about the data format? by dmbasso · · Score: 1

      I can still run my MSX games from ~30 years ago. All it takes is interest in maintaining the data. If it is important -- and some even if it isn't -- somebody will maintain it.

      --
      `echo $[0x853204FA81]|tr 0-9 ionbsdeaml`@gmail.com
    2. Re:what about the data format? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Storing the opening method should be top priority then!

    3. Re:what about the data format? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "If we want to preserve anything about the human race which can outlast the human race itself". So we need to find aliens who are willing to maintain it?

    4. Re: what about the data format? by AvitarX · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Frequency analysis and non compressed formats

      --
      Wow, sent an e-mail as suggested when clicking on "use classic" banner, and got a fast response that addressed my msg
    5. Re:what about the data format? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      All it takes is interest in maintaining the data. If it is important -- and some even if it isn't -- somebody will maintain it.

      There will be nobody to maintain it, if we're all dead.

    6. Re:what about the data format? by Waffle+Iron · · Score: 1

      That's nice and all but can we trust our data formats to stay static for that long? Having the data but being unable to open it seems rather useless to me.

      If we've been able to decipher obscure hieroglyphs and number systems from dozens of long-dead civilizations, I'm sure that 1 billion years from now scholars will be able to solve the arcane puzzle of ASCII and the VFAT file system. The much tougher problem would be: Once they have all the words extracted from the files, figuring out what they mean.

    7. Re:what about the data format? by alexgieg · · Score: 1

      So we need to find aliens who are willing to maintain it?

      Nope. We make the aliens to maintain it, either via genetic engineering or Artificial Intelligence.

      --
      Conservatism: (n.) love of the existing evils. Liberalism: (n.) desire to substitute new evils for the existing ones.
    8. Re:what about the data format? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      can we trust our data formats to stay static for that long?

      I can still run my MSX games from ~30 years ago

      Yes, 30 years is a good counter point to asking if we'll be able to understand the data in a BILLION years. (rolls eyes)

      Since you're obviously missing the point, go look up what the Rosetta Stone is, and why it's important, and think about how it's relevant to this discussion.

    9. Re:what about the data format? by Rob+Riggs · · Score: 3, Informative

      There is one key reason why we were able to decipher hieroglyphics. We had a cheat sheet containing a language we understood. Unless we can provide something like that, it will be very difficult. Perhaps we could include a primer with the text.

      --
      the growth in cynicism and rebellion has not been without cause
    10. Re:what about the data format? by Waffle+Iron · · Score: 1

      That's one writing system out of dozens.

    11. Re:what about the data format? by wjcofkc · · Score: 2

      While I am far from an expert in the field, there are ways of breaking down mathematics into extremely basic building blocks (visual) that could presumably be deciphered by any mathematically inclined sentient species and that once built up would provide the key\decoder for the rest of the data.

      --
      Brought to you by Carl's Junior.
    12. Re:what about the data format? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Also the case for the decipherment of cuneiform:

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Behistun_Inscription

    13. Re:what about the data format? by Oligonicella · · Score: 1

      No. It's pretty much all of them. Those without, like the Cretan hieroglyphics and Linear A are still untranslated.

    14. Re:what about the data format? by TWiTfan · · Score: 1

      That's nice and all but can we trust our data formats to stay static for that long?

      Even if humanity survives a billion years from now, they would be so radically different from us that not only would they not speak the same language, they probably wouldn't even communicate in the same WAY (or maybe even EXIST in the same way). Anything preserved from our era would be an odd novelty to them at best.

      And if humanity doesn't survive, then there's going to be no one left to care AT ALL. To think otherwise is hopelessly arrogant.

      --
      The cow says "Moo." The dog says "Woof." The Timothy says "Thanks, valued customer. We appreciate your input."
    15. Re:what about the data format? by JustOK · · Score: 2

      I thought Bob was maintaining it, but he said it was Mary who was responsible for it. But Mary hasn't worked here for 5 years. Yah, she was let go in that big round of layoffs just before Christmas that year. Yah, right! And Charlie, remember Charlie? Well, he said something really funny. Remember? Yah, me neither, although I think I thought it was really funny at the time. So, anyways, someone said it was left to the maintenance staff to maintain it. And the maintenance staff, yah, they're just the janitors and stuff. So they outsourced it, but they don't have records of who to, because the maintenance staff contract changed hands.

      --
      rewriting history since 2109
    16. Re:what about the data format? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Rosetta Stone is, and why it's important, and think about how it's relevant to this discussion.

      So you're afraid that your language learning software might not work in a billion years? I can assure you, it won't..

    17. Re:what about the data format? by dmbasso · · Score: 1

      You forgot Alice. But most importantly, you forgot the "interest in maintaining the data". When people have easy access to the data, it will be replicated. I don't think what happened to, for instance, the Dr. Who episodes that were lost, could happen again. At that time only a handful of people had access to the films... nowadays you can find practically anything on bittorrent / www.

      --
      `echo $[0x853204FA81]|tr 0-9 ionbsdeaml`@gmail.com
    18. Re:what about the data format? by AlecC · · Score: 1

      What happened to the Dr Who episodes was mainly due to the cost of storage. The tapes on which they were stored were relatively expensive, and no-one saw any possibility of future sales because they didn't foresee the number of channels available now. So the bean-counters ordered the tapes re-used.

      The cost of storage for those episodes is now trivial: they could probably all fit onto one memory stick, at a few tens of dollars. But this new tungsten storage is likely to be expensive, at least initially. Yes, you can get almost anything of that size onto dozens of disk drives all over the world, making them proof against any single cataclysm. But disk drives have a life of a few years - then what? Yes, they may roll forward onto new drives - or they may not. "Dormant" accounts may be deleted after a decade or so. So somebody has to want the data enough to pay for it to be transcribed to this new process.

      --
      Consciousness is an illusion caused by an excess of self consciousness.
    19. Re:what about the data format? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

      Make it GPL, then the aliens will not only maintain it, but will have to contribute back.

    20. Re:what about the data format? by LordLimecat · · Score: 2

      Just use an Office format, those will be around forever.

    21. Re:what about the data format? by Jeng · · Score: 2

      And if humanity doesn't survive, then there's going to be no one left to care AT ALL. To think otherwise is hopelessly arrogant.

      Yes, but if we are talking billions of years then a whole new sentient species could evolve on earth who may be able to eventually read the data. One billion years though may be a bit short for that outcome.

      --
      Don't know something? Look it up. Still don't know? Then ask.
    22. Re:what about the data format? by Gilmoure · · Score: 1

      You'd need an Omnilingual (by H. Beam Piper).

      --
      I drank what? -- Socrates
    23. Re: what about the data format? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      After humans, no one will care. Who's gonna read the crap?

    24. Re:what about the data format? by mrchaotica · · Score: 1

      I think you missed the GP's larger point: for information to be preserved, somebody has to care about it, and it's easier to find somebody who cares when more people have access.

      --

      "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz

    25. Re:what about the data format? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You forgot Alice. But most importantly, you forgot the "interest in maintaining the data". When people have easy access to the data, it will be replicated. I don't think what happened to, for instance, the Dr. Who episodes that were lost, could happen again. At that time only a handful of people had access to the films... nowadays you can find practically anything on bittorrent / www.

      Good idea, Go ask Alice, when she's 6 feet tall. Oh, I forgot, she got outsourced too and decided to open a Restaurant.

    26. Re:what about the data format? by bob_super · · Score: 1

      Given how well we're doing, I'm not sure I want a new sentient species to actually learn anything from us...

    27. Re:what about the data format? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The question is how often have ancient cultures made efforts to preserve their language and culture under the assumption there would not be a continuity of languages? If all we're finding is material made without the expectation translation would be needed in the future, or proclamations that assume just using multiple languages is enough, it is kind of hard to judge how difficult it would be to decipher something intended to be deciphered. I wouldn't assume we could make it work, but I would expect it might be different if thought and effort was put into making something created for that specific purpose.

    28. Re:what about the data format? by painandgreed · · Score: 1

      There is one key reason why we were able to decipher hieroglyphics. We had a cheat sheet containing a language we understood. Unless we can provide something like that, it will be very difficult. Perhaps we could include a primer with the text.

      Ideally, scientific text would be a good start. The numbers and the laws of physics won't change. Give them Pi and some well known equations and they should have our mathmatics system down. If they found a periodic table for example, they should be able to determine fairly easily that that is what it was and thus fill out all the appropriate descriptors. Similarly, diagrams and explainations of electric circuits, physics equations like Maxwell's, or even mechanical engineering texts should be easily recognised and they will know what the accompanying text is trying to say, especially after they fill in all the numbers.

    29. Re:what about the data format? by Lennie · · Score: 1

      We should ask the AI and robots to maintain it.

      --
      New things are always on the horizon
    30. Re:what about the data format? by RespekMyAthorati · · Score: 1

      So suppose people care about the information, and maintain the machines that access it for the next million years.
      Then human civilization collapses and we devolve into savages.
      Then 900,000,000 years goes by with nobody around to care or maintain the equipment that reads the data.
      Then a new civilization arises that would care about the information if only there were a way to make sense of it ....

    31. Re:what about the data format? by ecotax · · Score: 1

      That's nice and all but can we trust our data formats to stay static for that long?

      Just use Word 95 format. Everybody seems to be able to read that somehow, and there seems to be no way to get rid of it.

      --
      "Money is a sign of poverty." - Iain Banks
    32. Re:what about the data format? by LWATCDR · · Score: 1

      Well probably the first step would be to create a rosetta stone for them. Encrypt something that will probably be around for for a very long time in multiple languages. I would suggest three religious texts the bible, the Koran, and the Bhagavad Gita.
      Follow those by various texts on language, science, math, and history.
      Next I would document all the data formats used in the rest of the data.
      Then I would include things like all the patents and so forth.
      Then store copies of all the data in lots of places. Places like monasteries, castles, forts, national parks, the dry valleys of Antarctica, the tops of the highest non-volcanic mountains of each continent, the Atacama Desert, the great pyramids, several of the Mesoamerican pyramids, Stonehenge, and finally Ísafjörður and Neskaupstaður Iceland. The last two are near the mid atlantic ridge but not near active volcanoes. With the seabed spreading at the mid atlantic ridge that land should be around the longest. Maybe it should be an ongoing project. Every 100 years each of the data stores gets updated.

      --
      See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
    33. Re:what about the data format? by Rob+Riggs · · Score: 1

      What would it take to translate "Moby Dick" or "Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds" into such a language?

      --
      the growth in cynicism and rebellion has not been without cause
    34. Re:what about the data format? by SecurityGuy · · Score: 1

      Good idea! We can make the whole thing just a special feature to the movie Contact.

    35. Re:what about the data format? by Jeng · · Score: 1

      It could be that the purpose of our lives is only to serve as a warning to others.

      --
      Don't know something? Look it up. Still don't know? Then ask.
    36. Re:what about the data format? by Darinbob · · Score: 1

      In a billion years you'll still be required to connect to a remote DRM server to unlock your content.

    37. Re:what about the data format? by painandgreed · · Score: 1

      What would it take to translate "Moby Dick" or "Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds" into such a language?

      You wouldn't have another language. You'd just give them a bunch of science books to act as a rosetta stone since they know what they are saying in our language and they'd eventually figure out the rest from context.

    38. Re:what about the data format? by RockDoctor · · Score: 1
      Speaking as a geologist, and thus probably somewhat better acquainted with the idea of "Deep time" than many people here, the question of format stability was what occurred to me too.

      In a billion years, locally, we've had 4 Himalayan-scale mountain ranges built up and ground back down to sea level.

      --
      Birds are not dinosaur descendants;birds are dinosaurs, for all useful meanings of "birds", "are" and "dinosaurs"
    39. Re:what about the data format? by RockDoctor · · Score: 1

      Well probably the first step would be to create a rosetta stone for them. Encrypt something that will probably be around for for a very long time in multiple languages. I

      It's an encoding, not an encryption. Encodings are intended for transforming the form of data, but not necessarily to obscure it's content ; encryptions on the other hand are intended to obscure the content.

      For an example, my typing encodes the more-or-less phonetic letter 'S' into a series of binary digits, changing it's representation but not attempting to obscure it's content. The GUI of the computer changes the encoding into a pattern of pixels on screen, but again doesn't obscure the content. And then I feed it into an encryption engine, and who knows what comes out? Clear?

      --
      Birds are not dinosaur descendants;birds are dinosaurs, for all useful meanings of "birds", "are" and "dinosaurs"
    40. Re:what about the data format? by LWATCDR · · Score: 1

      Sorry my bad. It was late. But the correct term would actually be translate note encode since it would not be a one to one conversion.

      --
      See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
  3. Needs more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Giant stone tablets.

    Becuse who doesn't like confusing ancient giant stone tablets with some tweets on them.

  4. We already have this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Its called fossils.

    1. Re:We already have this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Can we please leave John McCain out of this?

    2. Re:We already have this by e_armadillo · · Score: 1

      Its called fossils.
      Wow! Wow! Wow! Really? We have found "tungsten encapsulated by silicon nitride" fossils?! Those must have been the coolest dinosaurs ever!

  5. SCROLLS !! LOTS AND LOTS OF SCROLLS !! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And caves !! Lots and lots of caves !!

  6. And the volume? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    At what volumes do they expect this storage medium to store data?

    1. Re:And the volume? by Teancum · · Score: 1

      As in what quantities of data are they talking about? Historically, there is the Bible with related similar tomes like the Torah (essentially the Old Testament with some minor differences), and the Koran. Perhaps something more recent would be the long-term archiving of something like Wikipedia or some other similar comprehensive encyclopedia. In terms of data sizes, think somewhere on the range of about a GiB to TiB.

  7. store it in space by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Use a very powerful laser and send the data off to empty space

    Of course if you wanted to retrieve it on Earth then you can't use this method...

    1. Re:store it in space by nedlohs · · Score: 1

      Of course you can, it just requires inventing a warp drive or a hyperspace drive or whatever your FTL of choice is...

    2. Re:store it in space by bobbied · · Score: 1

      Sure you can... It just takes a mirror in the right place...

      --
      "File to fit, pound to insert, paint to match" - Aircraft Maintenance 101
    3. Re: store it in space by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You so ugly, you broke all the mirrors!

  8. Data by prefec2 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Most of our data are totally uninteresting pieces of garbage. Think of it, a future species recovers an archive of present tweets and facebook comments. They will think that we died out because we were egocentric egoistic maniacs who do not care about their future and legacy. Furthermore, they will see it as direct evidence that we preserved nonsense about our pity lives in a super material, while other knowledge was not stored at all. But maybe, they just come up with the idea that the data must be somewhat scrambled, as it makes no sense at all.

    1. Re:Data by gunzy83 · · Score: 1

      This is why aliens do not want to speak to us.

    2. Re:Data by SigmundFloyd · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Think of it, a future species recovers an archive of present tweets and facebook comments. They will think that we died out because we were egocentric egoistic maniacs who do not care about their future and legacy.

      And they will likely be right.

      --
      Knowledge is power; knowledge shared is power lost.
    3. Re:Data by martyros · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Most of our data are totally uninteresting pieces of garbage. Think of it, a future species recovers an archive of present tweets and facebook comments.

      Said by someone who obviously has never done much looking at history. The fact that "uninteresting pieces of garbage", that either everyone knew and assumed or thought didn't need to be said, were *not* written down, makes it a lot harder to understand the context in which the things we *do* have were said. Having a handful of people's full FB / twitter records will be a treasure trove of information for 50th-century historians trying to figure out what life was actually like in the 20th century.

      --

      TCP: Why the Internet is full of SYN.

    4. Re:Data by Chatterton · · Score: 1

      Why caring about facebook, we have some libraries, wikipedia, mediawiki and other interesting stuff to store. Now if we did have some kind of wikipedia where we can store how to build everything needed from using our 10 fingers to build all the tools and industrial processes to be able to build a computer, that could also be of value to save...

    5. Re:Data by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well I meant my comment to be a bit on the humorous side. However, if I look at the past, it would be more likely that we store digital garbage on such information "discs" then knowledge. I believe that this would bring the future historian a good insight into our present. Therefore, we really should store facebook and twitter. ;-)

      Most likely, we will store nothing on such devices, because of the "not a concern now" problem. Maybe in the days when our society is vanishing, this might change. Until then we move all of our old data to a new storage device and lose in the process large amounts, because we do not care about them.

    6. Re:Data by jonbryce · · Score: 1

      I don't agree. The inane tweets about everyday life are exactly the sort of thing future historians will want to read. It will give them a much greater insight into what life was like than the stuff we find more interesting at the moment.

    7. Re:Data by disposable60 · · Score: 1

      It's be caues we're made out of meat.

      / Terry Bisson short story - 3 1/2 pages and just about perfect

      --
      You're looking for quotes? See my journal.
    8. Re:Data by Warbothong · · Score: 2

      The usual SciFi trope is that 'Maths is the Universal language', and data is just Maths. There are people investigating how to use incredibly simple encodings to build up meaningful messages which may be understood by advanced extraterrestrials. For example, CosmicOS is a 4-symbol lambda calculus which aims to do just this http://people.csail.mit.edu/paulfitz/cosmicos.shtml

      There are even simpler encodings, like Binary Lambda Calculus http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Binary_lambda_calculus and the more-verbose but conceptually-simpler Binary Combinatory Logic http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Binary_combinatory_logic

    9. Re:Data by Threni · · Score: 1

      > Having a handful of people's full FB / twitter records will be a treasure trove of
      > information for 50th-century historians trying to figure out what life was actually like
      > in the 20th century.

      Good for them. But why should anyone today care about stuff that's not even relevant now? How much money is it worth? People used to wallow in the past, but now they're wallowing in the future? "I think my posts are worth preserving - you can't prove they're not worth keeping". No, I can't. But they're not.

    10. Re:Data by Teancum · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Considering that archaeologists spend most of their time literally digging through garbage dumps, it is a funny choice of words to even say that "uninteresting garbage" is something that people in the future won't care about.

      Even if you take something like the Bible, which has been filtered through the hands of hundreds of generations of religious folks trying to make a philosophical point and to promote a certain viewpoint of history, there are still stories of incest, drug abuse, love poems, marital court rulings, genealogical records, dry legal codes, military order of battle charts, minutes of committee meetings, and of course battle reports and some epic tales thrown into the middle of all of that other stuff. I'm just suggesting that in the course of 10k-20k of written history those things which still survive tends to include a whole bunch of that "uninteresting garbage" even when it is heavily edited.

      What you are saying here is so true.

    11. Re:Data by ShanghaiBill · · Score: 1

      I don't agree. The inane tweets about everyday life are exactly the sort of thing future historians will want to read.

      Which makes it just like garbage. One of the most useful finds for an archeologist is an ancient garbage dump. Looking at what people toss out can reveal far more about how they actually lived than their writings or art.

    12. Re:Data by Oligonicella · · Score: 1

      Doubt it. It would be akin (because of the vast separation in time) to our finding forty thousand versions of "Damn, Og just missed small deer. ... No, wait, he return. ... Damn, Og just missed small deer." Not a lot of info and of no real use (we have the deer remains at the site as well).

      PS: For the great majority of ancient, we *do not* have the equivalent of FaceBook posts to augment the vast reams of inventory, royal notices and laws. The peasant's lives are reconstructed from evidence, not learned from text.

    13. Re:Data by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Having a handful of people's full FB / twitter records will be a treasure trove of information for 50th-century historians trying to figure out what life was actually like in the 20th century.

      Oh that's going to be a *great* source of information. NOT! In case you haven't noticed, Facebook is a collection of liberal leftist propaganda for the most part, with some "Hey look at me!" pictures mixed in. Looking back at that data is going to be digging though a land fill trying to determine the mating practices of 30 somethings. The data might be mixed in there, but the shear volume of the noise is going to be a serious problem. How do you interpret a copy of Maxim mixed in with a pile of grass clippings and yard waste?

    14. Re:Data by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They are NOT interesting now, how on earth would they be interesting in the future? What's a trillion tweets about Miley twerking going to mean to anybody a thousand years from now? Concentration on the micro is going to be pretty much noise as the decades pass. What's more it's going to offer worthless information that really means nothing and presents the danger of misinterpretation of what was really going on and what the important issues really where. I don't think Twitter or Facebook (and such) will be very useful.

    15. Re:Data by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Having a handful of people's full FB / twitter records will be a treasure trove of information for 50th-century historians trying to figure out what life was actually like in the 20th century.

      Wait a minute. Did FB/twitter exist in the 20th century?

    16. Re:Data by martyros · · Score: 2

      It would be akin (because of the vast separation in time) to our finding forty thousand versions of "Damn, Og just missed small deer. ... No, wait, he return. ... Damn, Og just missed small deer."

      Your example contains "damn", which could help you track exposure to religion, attitudes towards swearing, and so on. The existence of "small deer" could help you track the change of population and determine exactly when a species became extinct / sacred / in high demand. Even when not mentioned, a historian might be able to deduce that Og was using a ranged weapon here rather than a close-combat one, to help study ancient technology, correlating it with other evidence to track the rise and fall of different tribes or races. That all sounds like a potential treasure-trove of information to me.

      --

      TCP: Why the Internet is full of SYN.

    17. Re:Data by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Most of our data are totally uninteresting pieces of garbage. Think of it, a future species recovers an archive of present tweets and facebook comments.

      Who cares, this H. Sapiens is quite tasty and there have been many rich bids on their planet covered with liquid water and silicates.

    18. Re:Data by Flavianoep · · Score: 1

      This makes me remember Ovid's banishment. There is a lot of texts talking about the reason for that like it's well know matter, but nobody ever wrote that down, as much as what has been found.

      --
      Linux is for people who don't mind RTFM.
    19. Re:Data by jonbryce · · Score: 2

      Historians don't necessarily always want to know about "important" things. They sometimes want to know what everyday life was like for normal people. It isn't interesting to us, because we already know what it is like.

    20. Re:Data by Gilmoure · · Score: 1

      They could show some interesting trends in the development of president Cyris and help explain why she decided to invade Calvada when she did.

      --
      I drank what? -- Socrates
    21. Re:Data by Teancum · · Score: 1

      PS: For the great majority of ancient, we *do not* have the equivalent of FaceBook posts to augment the vast reams of inventory, royal notices and laws. The peasant's lives are reconstructed from evidence, not learned from text.

      You obviously don't do much research on 19th Century historical events. There are indeed substantial amounts of written information from that time period where "peasants" were literate and left behind a considerable legacy. To name one particular historical record that IMHO is almost precisely like a bunch of Facebook posts that instead was from the 1860's is this diary of a private in the U.S. Army during the U.S. Civil War (he served in the 2nd California Infantry Regiment). He was not a great war leader or for that matter anything more than a humble farmer that was drafted into military service at the time, just like hundreds of thousands of other people where the same thing happened.

      While I will agree that prior to about the 18th Century such diaries were uncommon, my point is that such things do exist, and surprisingly give an interesting bit of information when you do find such things. I have seen ancient pictographs written on the walls of caves and cliffs, put there by societies without a formal written language. More than art, they actually do convey some substantial information if you can but try to understand it.

      Part of the reason why we can understand how some ancient Sumerian common villager lived is also in part by watching how similar peasants live today in 3rd world countries under similar living conditions. A surprising amount of that information comes from diaries and such as well written for modern ethnographers, or at least researched by those who are studying modern cultures in part to understand cultures of the past. Such mundane records would definitely be of interest to historians trying to get some additional information about what happened in some significant event.

    22. Re:Data by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      If you only see 'liberal leftist propaganda for the most part' on Facebook, that's because those are the people with whom you associate on Facebook.

    23. Re:Data by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      PS: For the great majority of ancient, we *do not* have the equivalent of FaceBook posts to augment the vast reams of inventory, royal notices and laws. The peasant's lives are reconstructed from evidence, not learned from text.

      The reason there isn't an equivalent of Facebook for ancient times is because, in ancient times, literacy was by and large a suicidal waste of time. The primary needs were just barely meant by endless hours of manual labor. Even after literacy spread throughout the whole social structure, it was still mostly unused because the workers were too busy surviving to write about it.

      You can bet they said the same kinds of stupid shit amongst their friends which we see every few seconds on Twitter or Facebook.

    24. Re:Data by Kjella · · Score: 1

      The usual SciFi trope is that 'Maths is the Universal language', and data is just Maths.

      Well, we've never tried deciphering a language that anyone has made a genuine effort to make it so. Math has some really simple patterns that make it easy to distinguish from noise like 2, 3, 5, 7, 11, 13 or in binary
      000
      101 000
      10101 000
      101010101 000
      1010101010101 000
      101010101010101010101 000
      1010101010101010101010101 000
      From there I'd probably just repeat [x,y,pictogram of x*y bits] with silence to space them. I'd probably start with "illustrated math" to show like
      1 + 1 = 2
      . + . = ..
      2 + 1 = 3
      .. + . = ...
      I think the pattern should be fairly obvious no matter what kind of math they use. After we finish basic math then basic elements as pictograms, the "shell configuration" of electrons should be easily recognizable and universal. After that maybe try to derive the SI units (like kilo = hydrogen atom * big number) and start describing the universe as we know it. Honestly, it doesn't seem *that* hard as long as we aren't looking at a random scroll that may contain anything at all and makes no attempt to be decipherable by itself.

      --
      Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
    25. Re:Data by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      +5 insightful

    26. Re: Data by SpaghettiPattern · · Score: 1

      If you'd like to know how Europe was 1200 years ago then look no further than the middle east. (Woosh... That was the sound of my karma being nullified. )

      --

      I hadn't the slightest objection to his spending his time planning massacres for the bourgeoisie... (P.G. Wodehouse)
    27. Re:Data by TheLink · · Score: 1

      The usual SciFi trope is that 'Maths is the Universal language', and data is just Maths

      I suspect there's probably a trope that that's not true too ;)

      Can someone give me the math version of "I like chocolate!". Or "I love my wife"?

      --
    28. Re:Data by RespekMyAthorati · · Score: 1

      If they learn about the Tea Party, they will give up right there.

    29. Re:Data by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Facebook, yes. Twitter, no.

      But, we're not currently so far removed from the 20th century that the information on Twitter wouldn't still be useful for 50th century historians in that context.

    30. Re:Data by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's ok because the heat death of the universe means that any and all intelligence and all that it creates is doomed to dissolution anyway.

      The people that don't care about their future and legacy? Did it ever occur to you that they may be cognizant of the ultimate futility of giving a care?

    31. Re:Data by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      According to Wiki:


      Facemash, the Facebook’s predecessor, opened on October 28, 2003.Initially, the website was invented by a Harvard student, Mark Zuckerberg, and three of his classmates – Andrew McCollum, Chris Hughes and Dustin Moskovitz.

    32. Re:Data by Warbothong · · Score: 1

      Can someone give me the math version of "I like chocolate!". Or "I love my wife"?

      forall c, (isChocolate c) -> (likes me c)

      forall w, (married me w) -> (loves me w)

      "married", "isChocolate", "likes", "loves" and "me" are left as exercises for the reader.

    33. Re:Data by TheLink · · Score: 1

      Unfortunately, no one can be told what Chocolate is. You have to taste it for yourself.

      And how would tasting it work for aliens with different "tastes", living light years away from any chocolate? You might try an analogy, but how would you know what analogy would work in advance?

      There is more to communication than just math. In fact math could be a distraction in some cases. When you and someone else (even a dog) look at each other and gesture, and you both know what to do next, do you two actually use math to figure it out? You might be able to describe it with math but it's not the same thing.

      Yes you could say it is because both of you were thinking enough similar bits and the little nonverbal communication was sufficient for the "rsync".

      That still does not adequately describe the results.

      --
    34. Re:Data by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The majority of intelligences will come after the heat death - Boltzmann Brains.

    35. Re:Data by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Agreed, just look at the words being used (in context):
      Uninteresting: Common, how everyone lives, & speaks.
      Garbage: Typical concerns, daily life.

      So "Uninteresting Garbage" is essential to understand the culture, language nuances, and magnitude of the important events.

  9. Wow! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    Wow, a slashdot article with a straight-up link to the paper. No multi page article with embedded flash ads, no 'science journalism' minced down through a chain of successively dumber news outlets, no PR bullshit. Just the paper.

    Submitter, I'm impressed.

    1. Re:Wow! by GodfatherofSoul · · Score: 3, Funny

      Wow, a Slashdot poster who reads the articles! No hyperbolic responses to the headlines. No uninformed, youthful arrogant criticisms. No misinterpretation of the summary that makes the whole post irrelevant.

      Poster, I'm impressed. Oh wait, you're an AC. FU!

      --
      I swear to God...I swear to God! That is NOT how you treat your human!
  10. Porn at the museum of homo sapiens by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Homo futuriens will be intrigued at the museum watching ancien homo sapiens porn preserved in full 1080p.

  11. easy with lasers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Point a laser against empty space, fire away binary data encoded as 1 = light on, 0 = light off..
    The data will outlast human kind on earth.. since we not going to retrieve it ourself (all humans dead),
    it doesn't matter much that the data is far far away from earth.

    1. Re:easy with lasers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Point even our most powerful and best focused lasers at empty space, and outside of a few light years it's going to be utterly invisible, even if someone or something happens to be in the path of that beam.

  12. The authors don't trust their own invention by Laxator2 · · Score: 3, Funny

    The authors describe a medium that will hold information for 1million to 1 billion years, yet they publish their results on PAPER!
    Either they don't trust their own material will last as long as good old paper or they expect irrelevance to do its work faster than wear and tear.
    Otherwise, they would publish a "tungsten encapsulated by silicon nitride", not a "paper".

    1. Re:The authors don't trust their own invention by __aaeihw9960 · · Score: 1

      Couldn't we just etch everything into stone, then encapsulate it in concrete or other similarly hard medium, and put it into orbit around the moon? Wouldn't that last a while?

    2. Re:The authors don't trust their own invention by bobbied · · Score: 1

      Yea, but the "Paper" can be photo copied right?

      --
      "File to fit, pound to insert, paint to match" - Aircraft Maintenance 101
    3. Re:The authors don't trust their own invention by Bigbutt · · Score: 2

      Sure. We'll create a gigantic square block with a QR code on it so the aliens can scan it and immediately understand. :)

      [John]

      --
      Shit better not happen!
    4. Re:The authors don't trust their own invention by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The new material can be "tungstenized". Or something like that.

    5. Re:The authors don't trust their own invention by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It will last a while, provided that the rocket launching it doesn't crash on launch. Then it will last a very short time.
      The lack of atmosphere means no moisture, corrosion, etc, but it also means micormeteoroid abrasion.
      I think the lifetime would be a few hundred million years. :-(

    6. Re:The authors don't trust their own invention by femtobyte · · Score: 2

      Have you seen the surface of the moon? You know, the one pockmarked by all sizes of craters and pulverized to a fine dust? Space is a terrible place for long-term (billion-year) longevity of unprotected objects; anything you put there will end up ground to bits by micrometeorites in the long term, even in a rather hefty concrete capsule. Having a planetary atmosphere to take care of all but the biggest chunks of space debris is extremely useful; far better protection than quite a few meters of concrete.

    7. Re: The authors don't trust their own invention by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      i would go with a black monolith myself.

    8. Re:The authors don't trust their own invention by Gilmoure · · Score: 1

      Wrap it in I earned set to orbit in Oort belt?

      --
      I drank what? -- Socrates
    9. Re:The authors don't trust their own invention by cdrudge · · Score: 1

      An atmosphere may provide some protection from some space-borne objects, but not all. But regardless of how much protection it provides, Earth itself would likely be it's own destructive force for anything kept on it. How do you protect and object from the destructive forces that have created mountain ranges, carved grand canyons? Super volcanoes, glacial ice ages, hurricanes, flooding...

      Keeping the object just physically safe over a billion years on Earth I think would be far harder than making sure that it's readable should you manage that feat. I think that just flinging something off into the void of space you'd have better luck not hitting something significant than trying to protect it on earth.

    10. Re:The authors don't trust their own invention by DexterIsADog · · Score: 2

      You're pretty close to the real point - in a billion years, those fancy tablets would be subducted back into the mantle - geologists, feel free to correct the words, but the idea is right - by then, everything on the surface will be recycled back into the earth.

    11. Re:The authors don't trust their own invention by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > by then, everything on the surface will be recycled back into the earth.

      If that were true, we wouldn't find any rocks even a billion years old, let alone 3.4 billion year old rocks.

    12. Re:The authors don't trust their own invention by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You've read Footfall I see.

  13. Stop projecting human values on Aliens by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Think of it, a future species recovers an archive of present tweets and facebook comments. They will think that we died out because we were egocentric egoistic maniacs who do not care about their future and legacy.

    We don't know the thought patterns of the Aliens.

    Who knows ? Maybe they might even treat silly/mudane/inane tweets as "nuggets of enlightening wisdom"

  14. No we won't by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The human race isn't going to last a million years!

    1. Re:No we won't by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    2. Re:No we won't by bobbied · · Score: 1

      The human race isn't going to last a million years!

      Optimist!

      --
      "File to fit, pound to insert, paint to match" - Aircraft Maintenance 101
  15. "1 million to 1 billion years"! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You're being rather optimistic. Hitler's germany and the Roman empire both aimed for 1000 years and both failed. That might be a closer figure for the truth for the humankind as well.

    1. Re:"1 million to 1 billion years"! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I thought we'd all be dead from nuclear war by now, so we must be doing something right at least. We're the only animals in history that knowingly practice birth control so there's hope for us yet I think.

    2. Re:"1 million to 1 billion years"! by Amouth · · Score: 1

      We're the only animals in history that knowingly practice birth control so there's hope for us yet I think.

      Not really, there are a lot of animals out there that do this. Dolphins have Sex for fun, and a lot of smaller groups have passive systems that make them fertile only when their living conditions can support offspring (which is better than what we have now as humans).

      --
      '...if only "Jumping to a Conclusion" was an event in the Olympics.'
  16. But .... by Chrisq · · Score: 0

    I thought Jesus was coming back before then

    1. Re:But .... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He IS coming back. Remember though, anybody who tells you *when* is blowing smoke, looking for power, selling something, trying to get your money (or all of the above).

      Will he wait another million years? Lord, I hope not. Things got already pretty messed up in the last 2000 years, I'd hate to see what another million would do. Personally, I'm not sure we have even a decade before mankind goes into full self destruct mode again and makes WWII look like good times, but you KNOW it's coming. Man has cycled though prosperity, Social Decline, depression, war, death destruction, peace and back to the start throughout history with each war cycle using advancements in technology to reap destruction with more and more efficiency over larger areas.

      It used to be that these cycles where geographically separated. Regional conflict in Asia, Africa and Europe didn't interact that much. But in the last 200 years, it's become a global cycle and we've had WW-I and WW-II which where shaped by advancements in weapons technology. There may be regional disputes, but eventually they will drive global conflict, only with today's technology it's going to be a mess to behold...

      Come quickly!

    2. Re: But .... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are stupid.

  17. Wouldn't it be ironic... by mlosh · · Score: 3, Interesting

    ... if much of the world's tungsten ore was laced with silicon nitride "contaminants". Alexandria all over again.

    1. Re:Wouldn't it be ironic... by mhajicek · · Score: 2

      Hmm... Data mining.

  18. This medium will last only until... by FridayBob · · Score: 3

    ... a high-speed object collides with it. Because on a billion-year timescale the universe is a shooting gallery and everything is a target.

    1. Re:This medium will last only until... by Gavagai80 · · Score: 1

      The chances of any particular rock being destroyed by a meteorite within a billion years seem quite low.

      --
      This space intentionally left blank
    2. Re:This medium will last only until... by delt0r · · Score: 1

      No its not. You have the wrong impression of large ELE. First of all they produce a shift in the ecology, not total surface destruction. That is why there is still life on earth. Complex life at that. Second they are mostly very localized and only weather/climate effects are global. A 10 year winter is not going to destroy these disks. On top of all that, our current level of technology means we would survive anything as a species that expect in the life of the sun time frames.

      Its not the late heavy bombardment anymore and we are not stupid dinosaurs. We can survive long winters and even in the dark for very long times if we needed to.

      --
      If information wants to be free, why does my internet connection cost so much?
  19. assuming ... by znrt · · Score: 1

    ... there is something of value to preserve. i know, all the knowledge and that. but, honestly, looking at past and present, if i'd want to build a civilization in some billion years, i'd rather start from scratch. don't spoil them. humanity, what a troll!

  20. Go back! We fucked up! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I think the inscription to future species, races and civilizations should be "Go back! We fucked up!"

  21. Silicon Nitride is brittle by sir-gold · · Score: 2

    Maybe its different when bonded to tungsten, but silicon nitride by itself is extremely brittle, almost as brittle as glass.

    Modern natural gas furnaces use silicone nitride hot surface igniters (glows red hot and ignites the gas). These igniters will shatter when dropped as little as 1 foot onto concrete.

    1. Re:Silicon Nitride is brittle by delt0r · · Score: 1

      So don't drop it?

      --
      If information wants to be free, why does my internet connection cost so much?
  22. Can't always decipher them. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Linear Script A is still not decoded - though apparently related to Linear Script B (which has been decoded) it is still not translatable.

    There are others - http://www.omniglot.com/writing/undeciphered.htm

    The problem is not exactly solvable. All translated texts in existence have something related to base the translation on. The Egyptian Hieroglyphs were untranslatable, until the Rosetta stone provided a sequence of texts. Two were already known, which matched in their translations - thus implying that the unknown third was the same text in that language (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rosetta_Stone).

    1. Re:Can't always decipher them. by Muros · · Score: 1

      Linear Script A is still not decoded - though apparently related to Linear Script B (which has been decoded) it is still not translatable.

      There are others - http://www.omniglot.com/writing/undeciphered.htm

      The problem is not exactly solvable. All translated texts in existence have something related to base the translation on. The Egyptian Hieroglyphs were untranslatable, until the Rosetta stone provided a sequence of texts. Two were already known, which matched in their translations - thus implying that the unknown third was the same text in that language (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rosetta_Stone).

      This article from a few weeks back could provide a possible entry point for beginning to decipher texts like that. Since it relies not on dictionaries, but rather the relationships between words, it may be possible to narrow down the meanings of words in unknown languages into smaller groups of possible translations, or at least I imagine so from reading it.

  23. Devices to read it by pcjunky · · Score: 1

    All fine to have a storage medium that lasts a million years. How about the drive to read it?

    My wife did her thesis on the subject of long term data preservation.

    http://explorer.cyberstreet.com/CET4970H-Peterson-Thesis.pdf

  24. Whole idea is humorous by Oligonicella · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The entire concept of storing data for a billion years is nothing but ego. It would be akin to our finding a cave with forty-five thousand little paintings of dots, squares and circles - all perfectly preserved. What the hell does it mean? Curious and interesting to speculate on perhaps, but data? Not so much.

    1. Re:Whole idea is humorous by Jeng · · Score: 1

      Dead languages have been deciphered because of people devoting their lives to figuring out the ancient equivalent of forty-five thousand little paintings of dots, squares and circles.

      --
      Don't know something? Look it up. Still don't know? Then ask.
    2. Re:Whole idea is humorous by GodfatherofSoul · · Score: 1

      This was my exact thought. We're just going to look like ancient assholes a la Nebuchadnezzar (hope I'm thinking of the correct ironic monument to a fallen empire).

      --
      I swear to God...I swear to God! That is NOT how you treat your human!
    3. Re:Whole idea is humorous by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But in the cases I know of, there is continuity with known languages that allows the deciphering...

    4. Re:Whole idea is humorous by TheloniousToady · · Score: 1

      The entire concept of storing data for a billion years is nothing but ego. It would be akin to our finding a cave with forty-five thousand little paintings of dots, squares and circles - all perfectly preserved. What the ___ does it mean? Curious and interesting to speculate on perhaps, but data? Not so much.

      Haven't you heard? When aliens finally stumble upon the Voyager Golden Record, it will point them here and act as a Rosetta Stone which they can use to decode the stored data of the Humanity, long after it extinguished itself via thermonuclear war, greenhouse gasses, budget stalemates, or some yet-to-be-invented Man-made calamity.

      The aliens will, of course, find the Voyager LP to be quaintly archaic, having long since moved on to CDs themselves. But they will be delighted to be able to decode from silicon nitride those fascinating Facebook status updates about what each Human had for breakfast on Monday, October 14, 2013. (BTW, what exactly do those Humans mean by "Grape Nuts"?)

    5. Re:Whole idea is humorous by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ozymandias

    6. Re:Whole idea is humorous by GodfatherofSoul · · Score: 1

      Thanks much, this is the name I wanted

      --
      I swear to God...I swear to God! That is NOT how you treat your human!
    7. Re:Whole idea is humorous by RockDoctor · · Score: 1

      Haven't you heard? When aliens finally stumble upon the Voyager Golden Record, it will point them here

      For a few thousands, maybe tens of thousands of years; possibly a million years or two. Not very long.

      The Sun's position is described in relation to 14 pulsars, each identified by their rotation frequency. The rotation frequency of each should remain stable for a significant while longer, but you should note that the Sun is more-or-less in the equatorial plane of all of them. That isn't going to be the case for J.Random Alien from Somewhere Else. Also, the Sun is moving relative to all of those pulsars, and they're moving relative to each other.

      I don't know what the useful time scale of that map is, but it's certain to be only a small fraction of a rotation around the galactic core - which is ~200Myr. A couple of Myr is credible, but I wouldn't believe a couple of tens of Myr.

      --
      Birds are not dinosaur descendants;birds are dinosaurs, for all useful meanings of "birds", "are" and "dinosaurs"
  25. Analog vs. Digital? by ZahrGnosis · · Score: 5, Insightful

    We've been historically terrible at deciphering ancient languages without something to help link it to a current language (such as the Rosetta Stone).

    All this talk of data formats spanks of a very digital future, which I think we have a very hard time of predicting. The linked article is very binary... the grooves they explain can have "two or more" readable states, and their use of a QR code is interesting since it's an analog representation of an absurdly hard to decipher technology (without a key, as parent indicates should be the first thing). How would we encode data on these things? ASCII encoded English? Aliens would have to decode a language and then translate it. There's got to be something easier.

    At least the QR code is ultimately a 2D picture, though. I'd imagine any thorough storage over that period of time will have to start with something extremely basic. Sculptures or 2D visual instructions that clearly lay things out. I think you could probably describe a mathematical encoding mechanism visually, but a language would take some work. The Arecibo message is somewhat famous for being a digital message that is notoriously difficult to interpret, and that's by people who would actually recognize some of the glyphs. The picture attached to the 1970s Pioneer vessels is higher resolution and easier to identify, and the audio/visual nature of the Voyager Golden Record is also interesting. But still the idea that these will be intelligently deciphered by themselves is tiny.

    It's impressive that they're building something to last... they're just going to have to spend a lot of time figuring out what to put on it. Should lead to some interesting conversations.

  26. The Long Now Foundation is a bunch of whimps by Teancum · · Score: 1

    ... at least what the article sort of suggests. I have never seen that group being called a bunch of short-term thinkers before.

    That and the concept of DNA storage of massive volumes of information sounds particularly epic. It would be incredible to think you could do something like store the contents of Wikipedia inside of the DNA of a redwood tree. The very thought that an organism could be used in such a way to preserve information is by itself something very interesting to consider... and something that is currently at the threshold of being done.

    I'm really quite impressed with the level of thinking that this author has gone in terms of really getting into the grips of what it means for long term data storage systems. I'm sure other ideas will surface too, but this really is a pretty serious issue that has some tragic consequences in the past that need to be remembered too. The Aztecs and Mayans had huge libraries of writings in gold codices that the Spanish thought nothing more than to melt down into bullion bars... where even a fairly large percentage of those bars never even made the trip across the Atlantic Ocean (instead are on the bottom of that ocean) to get deposited into the royal treasury. Similar experiences happened with some things in Egyptian pyramids too. Making something durable yet making the information more valuable than the medium that is holding the data is a rather significant challenge.

  27. Write it on the moon with lasers. by bodly · · Score: 1
    --
    I haven't thunk up a cool sig yet.
  28. Waste by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If you believed in God and knew a bit of scripture, you would see that this fear and effort is in vain:

    2Pet 3:12 Looking for and hasting unto the coming of the day of God, wherein the heavens being on fire shall be dissolved, and the elements shall melt with fervent heat?

    1. Re:Waste by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So the second coming of God will be when the Sun expands into a red giant and engulfs the Earth? So we've got quite a bit of time to worry about this sort of thing.

  29. Where would you store it? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

    If you were to preserve this for the next species that evolves here to find, where should you store it?

    If you make it easy to find and retrieve, then you run the risk of a primitive culture destroying it as heretical once it's decoded. That risk still exists today.

    If you hide it, it may never be found.

    Monoliths on the moon are the only thing I can think of at the moment.

    1. Re:Where would you store it? by Ungrounded+Lightning · · Score: 1

      I'm more concerned with:
        - Our successors not realizing the media contain prtentially valuable recorded information early on, resulting in the media all being destroyed long before the successors' technology is up to decoding them.
        - The burying of the information of interest to them in enormous masses of uninteresting or unintelligible chaff, resulting in the data of interest never being recovered and used. (Imaging one copy of Wikipedia buried in 500 years of LOLCATS.)

      --
      Bantam Dominique roosters crow a four-note song. Once you've heard it as "Happy BIRTHday" you can't NOT hear it that way
    2. Re:Where would you store it? by RockDoctor · · Score: 1

      Our successors not realizing the media contain prtentially valuable recorded information early on, resulting in the media all being destroyed long before the successors' technology is up to decoding them.

      That is why the proposed data form consists of QR codes visible to the naked eye, each pixel of which is composed of a QR code readable with an optical microscope, each pixel of which QR code is composed of a QR code readable with an electron microscope ... (you may be able to fit several levels of microscopy in there).

      So, as the putative reading species improves their technology (potentially with information from the already-decoded level), new levels of data become visible.

      Interesting scheme.

      --
      Birds are not dinosaur descendants;birds are dinosaurs, for all useful meanings of "birds", "are" and "dinosaurs"
  30. Billions of years later... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Somewhere in the twilight zone, I'm not feeling the caring. Create a media that survives the gravitational collapse of the multiverse. I guess you would call it god, since no other medium would persist.

  31. One Billion BCE by wjcofkc · · Score: 2

    Sometimes I wonder if we will ever stumble across a one billion year old time capsule from a sentient species that previously lived on this planet. It's safe to say that sufficient time would erase any trace of even an advanced civilization with the exception of anything that was purposely preserved. Yes, that would be cool.

    --
    Brought to you by Carl's Junior.
    1. Re:One Billion BCE by Bengie · · Score: 1

      I wonder what the continents will look like in 1bil years. Entire mountain ranges will probably be eroded or subducted back into the mantle.

    2. Re:One Billion BCE by wjcofkc · · Score: 1

      Where I live in the mid-west has been both part of one of the tallest mountain ranges in the planets history, yet has also been at the bottom of a very deep ocean. I imagine both of those states will come back around again before the sun goes boom - perhaps more than once. Geological time is my number one fascination, side-by-side with the cosmos.

      --
      Brought to you by Carl's Junior.
    3. Re:One Billion BCE by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you talk to the right people with the right clearance, you'll learn that there is a lot of stuff like that out there. Usually, after the boffins scratch their heads and give up and maybe lose a few members, they just put up caution tape and leave it alone.

    4. Re:One Billion BCE by Gavagai80 · · Score: 1

      See Lovecraft's At the Mountains of Madness.

      --
      This space intentionally left blank
    5. Re:One Billion BCE by wjcofkc · · Score: 1

      One of my favorites. Good call non-the-less : p

      --
      Brought to you by Carl's Junior.
  32. Government as the answer by Tokolosh · · Score: 1

    "Actually, a government bureau is the nearest thing to eternal life we'll ever see on this earth."
      - Ronald Reagan

    --
    Prove anything by multiplying Huge Number times Tiny Number
  33. Well thought out dissertation! by Cliff+Stoll · · Score: 3, Informative

    Excellent thesis and a most delightful dedication!

        A few salient points from this thesis, for the Slashdot crowd:
        - Accumulation: knowing what to keep and what to toss
        - Distribution: where/how to keep copies
        - Digital stewardship: maintaining objects isn't enough ... you must properly catalog things
        - Long term access means more than just saving bits ... they must be properly rendered

    Convolved on this are problems with copyright, fair use, payment for archives, orphaned collections...

    Then there's the cost of creating and maintaining a long term digital repository.
    Librarians have done a terrific job with our printed archives. Who will become our digital librarians?

  34. much ancient writing business records by peter303 · · Score: 1

    Accounts of trade exchanges, wrehouse contents etc. Generally boring unless you are writing an economics paper.

  35. What would we write? by PPH · · Score: 1

    And who would understand it? I have trouble with Shakespeare's iambic pentameter. Do you think the descendants of humans or some alien race will understand a Slashdot archive of "In Soviet Russia" quips?

    --
    Have gnu, will travel.
  36. Nothing will last a billion years . . . by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    . . . without maintenance. "Elevated temperature tests" cannot be used to interpolate for billions of years. There are so many different mechanisms of wear at play:

    * The usual thermal, chemical and mechanical forms of wear. This stuff may seem strong now, but what chemicals will be around in a billion years? More fluorine pollutants could easily dissolve this.

    * Then there is geological wear. Oops, our archive ended up in a subduction zone and melted in the earth core

    * If there is much of something, then new life forms will evolve to break it down. There is not much biological corrosion of tungsten - today. But deploy lots of it, and tungsten-reducing bacteria will evolve to fill your new ecological niche. Metal-eating bacteria are kind of slow, but can do a lot in a hundred years. Never mind a million!

    * If humans disappear, intelligent life might evolve again. That's why such an archive is wanted. But like us, they might find that tungsten is useful in weapons. There goes the archive . . .

  37. DNA Data Storage by structural_biologist · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Last year George Church and colleagues published a paper in Science describing data storage using DNA (Church, Gao, and Kosuri. 2012. Next-Generation Digital Information Storage in DNA. Science 337: 1628. doi:10.1126/science.1226355) . While perhaps not lasting billions of years, given that we've been able to read DNA from creatures that existed millenia ago (whose DNA was definitely stored in non-ideal conditions), DNA data storage could potentially preserve data for very long periods of time.

    1. Re:DNA Data Storage by HiThere · · Score: 1

      Sorry, but...
      The only DNA that's preserved without corruption over the long term is that portion that is vital to the continued reproductive success of the organism. So even if you managed to encode a message into it, it would never be interpreted as other than functional.

      P.S.: Over evolutionary time, and a billion years is actually quite a bit longer than the minimal evolutionary time, even vital functions tend to be altered. There are a very few segments of DNA that have been preserved unaltered for that long, but VERY few. Perhaps cytochrome-c, or some of the HOX genes. Even there you get neutral drift.

      --

      I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
    2. Re:DNA Data Storage by AceJohnny · · Score: 1

      Indeed, but what information would you choose to store?

      --
      Misleading titles? Inflammatory blurbs? Keep in mind that Slashdot is a tabloid.
    3. Re:DNA Data Storage by structural_biologist · · Score: 1

      When I mentioned DNA from millenia ago, I was referring to scientists being able sequence DNA from the remains of dead, extinct animals (like the woolly mammoth genome). In the Science paper, they print the DNA onto a microchip which can be easily read out with standard DNA sequencing machines. Storing information in the DNA of a living organism would, of course, not work very well because of the low but significant error rate of DNA replication.

    4. Re:DNA Data Storage by delt0r · · Score: 1

      I have worked with "ancient" DNA. Its not a good way to preserve data. Not a good way at all.

      --
      If information wants to be free, why does my internet connection cost so much?
    5. Re:DNA Data Storage by HiThere · · Score: 1

      Most of the mammoth DNA is totally gone. There are a few fragments than can be retrieved with immense effort. And even those only exist because of the tremendous number of copies made. Even Quagga DNA hadn't been found the last time I checked, and that became extinct within the last couple of centuries.

      --

      I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
  38. Porn? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Great...so we can create the world's oldest porn collection for future species/generations?

  39. They should revisit their time estimate.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How long do you need to store data?

    At the moment we only really need to store data for about a lifetime. Because data is transposed into the latest storage medium on a regular basis. Look at people translating pianola rolls.

    The only reason for storing data for a longer period is if some catastrophe happened, and mankind's civilisation started to disintegrate. We then have 2 possibilities. Either:

    1 - Civilisation comes back
    2 - It doesn't

    If 2) happens, we don't need to worry about storage.

    If 1) happens, we need to estimate how long civilisation is likely to be down, and store for that long. If we take the Dark Ages as an example (and yes, I know that that is just a Western Historian's view of world history) we are probably talking about 600 years max?

    Think about it. There really is no point putting stuff in a Million-Year store. For a start, it's going to be expensive, so how would you chose what to put in? Just the Best? But that's already being transmitted through the culture by transposition onto the latest media anyway...

    1. Re:They should revisit their time estimate.... by HiThere · · Score: 1

      A million years *does* seem like overkill. OTOH, for many purposes 1,000 years doesn't seem long enough. Say it needs to be long enough for Mickey Mouse to get out of copyright. Estimate 5,000 years, but a bit longer wouldn't hurt.

      But the problem is being able to read it even if you have it preserved. I ran into that problem in less than 2 decades with 200 BPI Even parity mag tape. (Granted, the tapes probably weren't good any longer, but there wasn't anyplace accessible where I could even try.) Binary tape would have been a worse problem, however, because I would have needed an IBM 7094 to interpret them. Like row binary was worse than column binary on punched cards. (Ever wonder why punched cards were 72 + 8 columns rather than just 80? In row binary you got two 36 bit words per row per card, and columns 73 through 80 were for sequence numbers, in case you dropped the deck.)

      So say we go through a few decades where they laws prohibit copying for much longer than the durability of the storage media (enforced by DRM, of course, as well as by lawyers and police). Civilization doesn't need to collapse in order to cause near total loss of records. Popular interest waxes and wanes, so illegal copying can't be depended upon as a way around this. It may extend the life of some records, but not even as much as three times the durability. (Most things are only popular for at most a year, with VERY rare exceptions.)

      Disney used to figure on releasing their movies once every seven years, so figure that long on how long it takes something popular to sink into obscurity. Which means that illegal copying will only extend the lifetime of a work by about seven years. 21 is being extremely generous. That's not very long measured against even current history. And studios, e.g., have a long history of destroying works that they don't feel are worth reissuing. (Not making them public, destroying them.)

      So 5,000 years seems like a good goal. That doesn't require tungsten+silicon nitride. But it does require that the material be stored without DRM and without compression. Even then if the mechanism has been forgotten, it will be difficult to read.

      Preservation requires multiple copies as well as durability. And it requires durability as well as multiple copies (unless you are saying something like "This is how you metabolize oxygen".).

      To me this sounds like a stabilized matrix that has cells that are either filled or left empty. The cells could be quite small, and it could be written by a specially adapted ink-jet printer. But you would want to fill the cells with something that was both stable and contrasting. Possibly a carbon matrix with a titanium white filler. This wouldn't survive high temperatures, but it could be quite cheap to produce, so you could have multiple copies. I'm thinking of something sort of like a high-tech paper that could be read by a microscope. An adaption of the microfiche idea, but using something a lot more stable than film, a lot cheaper than film, and with a binary coding rather than photographic images. I envision it as being "normally" processed by somthing vaguely like a cross between paper tape readers/writers and mag tape readers/writers. It would NOT be a cheap medium to have the ability to process, but it would be cheap to process once you had the equipment. And it would be intended just about solely for archival purposes.

      OTOH, there's nothing that says something similar but easier to handle couldn't be common. It could store information quite densely, though probably only around 2^20 bits/square inch. (Note that tha's only 1024 bits/linear inch, which is a lot less than current mag tape. But I'm using area rather than just linear measure. The difficulties would be that this wouldn't be a mass-market product, so cost would be an issue.) Perhaps a bit less. (The dots would be quite small, after all.) I'm envisioning a matrix of carbon nanotubes as the basis, which makes it rather strong. But it also needs to be handleable and manufacturable...which that isn't, yet.

      --

      I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
    2. Re:They should revisit their time estimate.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm thinking of something sort of like a high-tech paper that could be read by a microscope. An adaption of the microfiche idea, but using something a lot more stable than film, a lot cheaper than film, and with a binary coding rather than photographic images. I envision it as being "normally" processed by somthing vaguely like a cross between paper tape readers/writers and mag tape readers/writers. It would NOT be a cheap medium to have the ability to process, but it would be cheap to process once you had the equipment. And it would be intended just about solely for archival purposes.

      Atomic force microscopeis your friend.

    3. Re:They should revisit their time estimate.... by HiThere · · Score: 1

      I'm thinking of cells considerably larger than that. That couldn't be written with an adapted ink-jet mechanism. Think more of something about the size of a skin cell to represent a bit.

      --

      I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
  40. Beyond us? by Deliveranc3 · · Score: 1

    You mean like "A Canticle for Leibowitz" ... joy.

  41. Proliferation is key by Tony+Isaac · · Score: 2

    Archaeology demonstrates that survival over long periods of time is quite random and rare, and does not correlate well to the intent of the creator to preserve the creation for long periods of time. There are always unanticipated threats to the existence of these artifacts: war, natural disasters, rot, rust, erosion, language obsolescence, to name a few. The longer the time period, the more likely that some catastrophe will befall any given artifact.

    Works that have survived for millennia tend to be items that were copied prolifically. A few of the many copies or items survive the ravages of time, but not because the creators anticipated all of the things that could destroy their work.

    For example, none of the original manuscripts of the Bible have been found, as far as we know. But because those manuscripts were copied and translated so often, we have reasonably accurate copies of those original texts.

    A million years from now, nothing much will be left of these new storage media. They will only survive if people in the future consider the information important enough to copy it to new media, and translate it into the new formats of the time.

    1. Re:Proliferation is key by Bengie · · Score: 1

      If you don't try, you will always fail. If you do try, you may fail.

      I'm sure future intelligent races will have historians, and they'd be thrilled to find something that is near impervious to corrosion and containing information.

    2. Re:Proliferation is key by fredrated · · Score: 1

      In 1 billion years even techtonic plate activity will be appreciable. Need to find a place that isn't going under.

  42. Just tell my wife by ainkor · · Score: 2, Funny

    Works especially well if it's something that pisses her off.

  43. And store it where? by Viol8 · · Score: 1

    Its all very well storing it ON something for a billion years, but thats no use if that something is subducted into the earths crust in that time period of which there is a close to 100% chance it will happen. So storing it on earth is pointless , where else? Space? Nope. Any satellite would suffer orbital decay or be dragged off into the sun or some other body long before a billion years had passed and who the hell could find it even if it didn't?

    Its a nice intellectual exercise but ultimately futile. In 1 billion years humanity and in fact all the rest of life on earth will be history because earth by then will be a boiling hell due to the sun heating up. We should just except that and make the most of the time we're here.

  44. We should focus on how to keep data on the net by presidenteloco · · Score: 1

    Ok, if it's for aliens, then maybe you need tungsten, and spread about a billion of the things around in the vain hope one of them will actually be found against all odds.

    But if it's for humans then consider. There are two scenarios:
    1) There is a global catastrophe or mass insanity of such proportions that all trillion of the penny-sized server computers of the near future which each have enough storage to store significant percentages of our data as a whole are wiped out, along with all of the electricity infrastructure and the instructions on how to build more electricity infrastructure.
    In that case I submit that the 10 of us who temporarily survived the vancouver-island-sized meteor hit have more problems to deal with than resurrecting our facebook profiles and physics e-textbooks. Maybe something which told you which varieties of cockroaches were not poisonous to eat would be handy mind you.

    2) There is no disaster of that scale, and a semblance of our current civilization survives somewhere, ergo, we still have a chunk of Internet somewhere, and a substantial chunk of all its content to date.

    Notice that in scenario 2, the key issue is that we've finally learned how to back up our data and adequately distribute rendundant copies of it around the world, a process that should pretty much be automatic. Making sure we keep doing that is one of the most important things we can do to preserve digi-culture. It's really the only major thing we have to learn how to do and keep doing to save information for countless generations.

    --

    Where are we going and why are we in a handbasket?
  45. I Have a Cheaper Answer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    All you need to do is encode data on an aluminum disc platter in the form of ridges and valleys. Then you hermetically seal or laminate the aluminum disc inside a thick clear polycarbonate shell. Then access the data, you simply "look" at the ridges and valleys through the polycarbonate with a laser. There's never any physical contact with the platter and no electrical charge either, so nothing to ever wear out. Flawless victory!

    Whut?

  46. AI solution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "If we want to preserve anything about the human race which can outlast the human race itself"
    Just burn it on some million DVDs and kill all humans.

  47. Singularity Proof by Agripa · · Score: 1

    Punching a vanadium tape and storing it on Charon would probably work well.

  48. Score one for Analog records and cassettes by MXB2001 · · Score: 0

    Not to mention that it seems that 8 tracks will outlive MP3's.

    --
    01/01/01
  49. Why? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    As in, why would want to preserve anything about the human race for one million or one billion years after the human race is gone?

    Is telling the )*(@&#%$JHSDFKL race, "Don't vote Republican! Or Democrat!" really worth the effort?

  50. Aren't the archived musings of /. worthy? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Isn't the wit displayed here day in and day out greater than all the achievements of humankind?

  51. Best hurry! by CHIT2ME · · Score: 0

    Better hurry up! At the rate we're destroying the earth, the human race doesn't have much time left!!!

    --
    My karma is bad. Don't get too close!!!
  52. Avoid Plate Tectonics by bbsalem · · Score: 1

    Better find a place that is likely to not be munged by plate tectonic cycles on average a quarter billion years, for the Earth. I would suggest planning the data repository to reside on the Moon or Mars, some place that doesn't change much in a billion years, I have thought about this off and on and realize that a safe thing to do is to put the archive somewhere in space.