[HN Gopher] Arctic World Archive Adds Latest Data Deposit in Sva...
___________________________________________________________________
 
Arctic World Archive Adds Latest Data Deposit in Svalbard Facility
 
Author : infodocket
Score  : 60 points
Date   : 2021-09-25 16:31 UTC (6 hours ago)
 
web link (www.datacenterdynamics.com)
w3m dump (www.datacenterdynamics.com)
 
| Zamicol wrote:
| "QR code" is a trademark of Denso Corporation, and refers to a
| specific technology. I'm unsure why news sources continue to
| misreport that the data is stored in "QR code". The correct term
| is "2D barcode".
| 
| Looking at their github, "QR code" is glaringly elided from their
| README. I'd guess they're very familiar with the standing QR code
| trademark. https://github.com/piql/boxing
| 
| Piql's 2D barcode technology is called a "boxing barcode". It is
| not a QR code. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boxing_barcode
 
| atty wrote:
| I love the idea of archiving everything we can, but does anyone
| else feel like the arctic archive was created by people who got
| wrapped up in too much science fiction? I feel like there's a lot
| more practical short-to-mid term archiving of historical physical
| and electronic data that really needs to get done, that also has
| a much higher chance of being needed in the future. But perhaps I
| am just being short-sighted. I am also fully aware that one form
| of archiving does not mean other forms can not happen. But there
| does seem to be limited resources for this sort of activity.
 
  | wiradikusuma wrote:
  | I think somebody has to do it. It's like backup, we don't think
  | we'll need it much until we need it.
  | 
  | Imagine if we as human had started preserving our knowledge
  | since Ancient Greek (and, not burning the libraries..),
  | collectively we could have been at a better place.
  | 
  | Or at least 1,000 years from know they will know there was once
  | PPAP (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NfuiB52K7X8).
 
  | cwp wrote:
  | I think the main motivation for doing it in Svalbard is the
  | seed vault, which benefits from the cold, dry environment in
  | the permafrost. And sure, that the remote location lends its
  | self to Foundation-like restore-civilization-after-the-dark-age
  | scenarios, but it works fine for shorter-term back up too. If
  | there's a blight that wipes out corn or something we can use
  | the seed vault to replant. (Assuming we can cure the blight...
  | cf the American Chestnut.)
 
    | sc11 wrote:
    | The Syrian civil war was such a scenario where it was useful
    | as a short-term backup: https://www.croptrust.org/in-the-
    | news/syrian-war-causes-glob...
 
  | bsza wrote:
  | This thing ain't science fiction:
  | 
  | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carrington_Event
 
| woodruffw wrote:
| I heard about this facility previously due to GitHub's Arctic
| Code Vault[1], but this is the first time that I'm hearing that
| they're effectively using encoded microfilm[2][3] as their
| storage medium. Pretty cool stuff!
| 
| [1]: https://archiveprogram.github.com/arctic-vault/
| 
| [2]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Microform
| 
| [3]: https://www.piql.com/services/long-term-information-storage/
 
| wbeckler wrote:
| I always thought Svalbard was a made up place in His Dark
| Materials by Philip Pullman.
 
| rebuilder wrote:
| > However, future generations would need at least some level of
| technology - a camera and some compute capabilities.
| 
| It does kind of make you wonder - what is the data that is worth
| backing up in a really futureproof manner? If we keep our tech
| level, we're probably not going to need to relearn how to make
| semiconductors. If we do not, we probably have bigger concerns
| than what a user with the nick rebuilder said on a nerdy forum in
| the year 2021.
 
  | thaumasiotes wrote:
  | > what is the data that is worth backing up in a really
  | futureproof manner?
  | 
  | A futureproof encoding would have to be something like images
  | at a scale visible to the naked eye engraved in a substance
  | that cannot be corroded or destroyed. Stainless steel is
  | probably fine for the material, but you run into limits on the
  | amount of space (and steel) you're willing to devote to the
  | project. And most information just can't be represented
  | pictorially anyway, so the theoretical possibility of
  | futureproof storage isn't even there.
 
| fnord77 wrote:
| > The same mine complex also features the Global Seed Vault which
| preserves some 400,000 plant varieties to maintain diversity in
| crops.
| 
| Isn't this the mine complex that is flooding due to melting
| permafrost?
| 
| well at least with data, I'm sure they have some durable format
| that will survive flooding
| 
| > Piql takes data and converts it into a QR code that is put onto
| 35mm film and stored in reels.
| 
| or not.
| 
| It seems insane putting this stuff in an icy hole in the ground
| on a warming planet.
| 
| Why not find some geologically stable mountain or plateau that
| has a slow erosion rate in a desert and build a bunker?
 
  | varjag wrote:
  | Cooling takes energy, which is the first thing to go in a
  | doomsday scenario. But you get it very much for free 1300km
  | beyond the Arctic Circle.
  | 
  | > Isn't this the mine complex that is flooding due to melting
  | permafrost?
  | 
  | The entrance hall was flooded in 2017, the seeds were not
  | endangered. The entrance has been upgraded since.
  | 
  | > It seems insane putting this stuff in an icy hole in the
  | ground on a warming planet.
  | 
  | As it is customary, all the concerns you come up with in first
  | 5 minutes after reading an article on the Internet were likely
  | considered by people working on the project.
 
    | JohnJamesRambo wrote:
    | > As it is customary, all the concerns you come up with in
    | first 5 minutes after reading an article on the Internet were
    | likely considered by people working on the project.
    | 
    | This is beautiful.
 
    | fnord77 wrote:
    | Apparently they were not considered if they had to do major
    | retrofitting.
    | 
    | > In October 2016, the Seed Vault experienced an unusually
    | large degree of water intrusion due to higher than average
    | temperatures and heavy rainfall. While it is common for some
    | water to seep into the Seed Vault's 100 m (328 ft) entrance
    | tunnel during the warmer spring months, in this case the
    | water encroached 15 m (49 ft) into the tunnel before
    | freezing.[21] The Seed Vault was designed for water intrusion
    | and as such the seeds were not at risk.[21] As a result,
    | however, the Norwegian public works agency Statsbygg
    | completed improvements to the tunnel in 2019 to prevent any
    | such intrusion in the future, including waterproofing the
    | tunnel walls, removing heat sources from the tunnel, and
    | digging exterior drainage ditches.[22][23]
 
    | henearkr wrote:
    | They should put vaults in Antarctica though.
    | 
    | Much safer, and the mainland Antarctica will not likely melt.
 
      | varjag wrote:
      | Norway however only has territory in the Arctic (which is
      | an island that is not going to melt as well), and there
      | were not any other takers.
 
        | sgt wrote:
        | Norway has claim to a huge area of Antarctica. Queen
        | Maud's land. Subject to the Antarctic Treaty and also
        | recognized by UK, France Australia, etc.
 
        | vidarh wrote:
        | Norway claims territory in Antarctica too, but these
        | claims are only recognized by a handful of states who
        | also claim land in Antarctica...
        | 
        | The lack of recognition doesn't really preclude
        | construction that can be justified as for scientific
        | purposes, though.
        | 
        | Convenience is more important.
 
| PicassoCTs wrote:
| But is a archive not better, when it can be seen?
| 
| Imagine humanity is no more, but up there in orbit, a satellite
| similar in Size to Hubble contains all the data humanity ever
| produced. It observes the neighborhood, on the look out for
| likely orbits in the habitable zone, deduces planets. And when it
| has found a candidate, it beams a laser at the estimated position
| at arrival time, sending a cultural dump over the ocean of space
| and time. A lighthouse and a graveyard candle at the same time.
| 
| And if hardened against the eventuality of failure properly,
| somewhere, sometimes in the far future, some alien might look up
| at the night-sky and see a flickering, traveling disc of light,
| seemingly flying fast with the speed of planetary rotation. That
| would be a monument with purpose. Giving others all the knowledge
| we had, as a gift, to do better.
 
___________________________________________________________________
(page generated 2021-09-25 23:00 UTC)