Submitted: February 14, 2008 - 10:27am
Last updated: February 21, 2008 - 12:08pm
Last updated: February 21, 2008 - 12:08pm
HOW CAN WE BE SURE WE'LL REMEMBER OUR DIGITAL PAST?
[SOURCE: The Christian Science Monitor, AUTHOR: Chris Gaylord]
Losing personal files can be upsetting. But failing to protect academic, government, or corporate data could erase irreplaceable pieces of history, says Francine Berman. She co-chairs a newly formed panel of experts tasked to ask how the world can protect its digital past, and answer a more nagging question: Who's going to pay for it? Unfortunately, she says, the same culture that makes creating our digital lives so easy, makes protecting that data very difficult. Consumers expect faster computers, smarter software, and new gadgets every few years.
http://www.csmonitor.com/2008/0214/p13s02-stct.html
Links to Sources
Related
- Is it time to scrap the Internet and start over?
- Can Web-based worlds teach us about the real one?
- Municipal Wi-Fi thrives on a small scale
- On the Internet, everyone may find you're a dog
- Maybe e-mail isn't such a great idea, after all
- Digg's online crowd flexes its muscle
- Who controls the news? On the Web, you can.
- Credible Web? It's where we click most
- Congress's dilemma: When Yahoo in China's not Yahoo
- As EPA libraries go digital, public access suffers
- Debate heats up over Net neutrality
- House Defies Bush on Wiretaps
- Patrons rally behind resilient public libraries
- Cellphones bring a : - ) to remotest Africa
- How the threats to the Internet's openness can be averted
Topics
Ratings
Recommendation:
0
Informative:
0
Accuracy:
0
Login to rate this headline.

