On 5/22/21 7:41 PM, Adrian Stoness via cctalk wrote: > link rot is weird in what disapears vs still works > > On Sat, May 22, 2021 at 6:45 PM Ali via cctalk <cctalk@classiccmp.org> > wrote: > >> Interesting article on Link Rot and its prevalence. According to the >> article even sources being referenced as early as 2018 have about a 60% >> Rot.I think all of us in this hobby can relate nor only to loss of articles >> but from sites, drivers, file repositories, etc.... >> https://www.theverge.com/2021/5/21/22447690/link-rot-research-new-york-times-domain-hijacking
I've said it before--putting information on the web is like writing in sand. Thank heavens for the Wayback machine (which is why I support Brewster's efforts). However, it's far from perfect--in particular ftp content has apparently never been archived and many vendor's support pages have had robots.txt files preventing them from being archived. Still, it's better than nothing and I appreciate it. Were it more complete, I might not have to spend so much time reverse-engineering software. Try searching for some of the older, say, HP support pages. I'm pretty sure that some "executive' made the decision to pull all of the support material for old systems, as that doesn't contribute to the bottom line. The New HP Way. A nasty trend is adware sites are simply quoting text from a large number of now defunct pages; go to the link and you get the "CONGRATULATIONS! YOU ARE THE ONE BILLIONTH VISITOR!" page. Run, do not walk away. A more disturbing popular trend is information being placed in long-ish Youtube videos that could have been summarized concisely in a page of text. --Chuck