✨ We’re excited to share the first articles from AI & ARCHIVES — a special issue of the new journal Cambridge Forum on AI: Culture and Society (Cambridge University Press). www.cambridge.org/core/journal...
✨ We’re excited to share the first articles from AI & ARCHIVES — a special issue of the new journal Cambridge Forum on AI: Culture and Society (Cambridge University Press). www.cambridge.org/core/journal...
Thrilled to see @ktmac.bsky.social and my paper on robots.txt and infrastructural consent published here!!
Stamps featuring Kate Beaton, Jimmy Beaulieu, Guy Delisle, Julie Doucet, Bryan Lee O’Malley and Michael Nicoll Yahgulanaas
Canada is releasing a set of stamps celebrating the nation's graphic novelists.
These stamps feature Kate Beaton, Jimmy Beaulieu, Guy Delisle, Julie Doucet, Bryan Lee O’Malley and Michael Nicoll Yahgulanaas, alongside some of their famous works.
Belatedly posting, so great to present my paper "What is a Data Document?" at #ASIST25 #ASIST2025 this afternoon looking at data documentation frameworks like datasheets, data cards, data nutrition labels and data statements, paper available here: asistdl.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10....
Torrano Beisbol Birds
Let's go Blue Jays!!!
Internet Histories Volume 9, issue 1-2 is now online.
Please notice: This special double issue: Gender in Internet and Web History, has free access until the end of July.
www.tandfonline.com/toc/rint20/9...
#webarchiving
#digitalhumanities
#internethistories
#internethistory
#webhistory
The Journal Internet Histories, www.tandfonline.com/journals/rin...
...has joined Bluesky, and will post news on articles and publications concerning internet research, web archives, comtemporary history, etc..
Kind regards,
Asger Harlung, Editorial assistent, Internet histories
We ask:
📍Where is our archive?
📍Whose heritage are we preserving?
📍Who cares for it?
Our guiding statements—Take it down, Take it slow, Take it back—connect critical archival studies with ecological justice to imagine an archival ecosystem beyond Big Tech.
📄 link.springer.com/article/10.1...
A mock-up of an open book- on one side there is light mint/robin's egg blue background and the text "The House Archives Built, Revisited" with smaller text in a typerwriterish font. On the other side there is a sepia photo from the 1870's of a Black man standing on a porch with his hands on a chair and his legs crossed in a jaunt manner.
There is so much bad news on micro and macro levels lately, I will share a little personal win. Here is a sneak peek at a very early dummy of the interior layout for my book "The House Archives Built, and Other Thoughts on Black Archival Possibility," upcoming from @wehere.bsky.social press.
My #iconf25 paper with @drtlwagner.bsky.social is now online OA 🔓 in Information Research! 🎉 To hear us talk more about r/DataHoarder 📀📦 and digital curation practice, join our virtual session Wed Mar 12 or in person Thu Mar 20 (Cultural Heritage, Archives & Museums II)
doi.org/10.47989/ir3...
Great review from a great scholar - and if you're inspired to check out Averting the Digital Dark Age, a reminder that you can snag it open access at muse.jhu.edu/book/123276.
My review of @ianmilligan1.bsky.social's Averting the Digital Dark Age is out in Internet Histories! 📖✨
It shows how the imaginary of the "digital dark age" saw a bizarre array of actors mobilise to create what are now known as web archives that are shaped by their anxieties & hopes for the future.
To select your third-party sign-in prompt preferences: On your computer, open Chrome. At the top right, select More More and then Settings. On the left, select Privacy and security and then Site settings. Under “Content,” select Additional content settings and then Third-party sign-in. Select to show or block sign-in prompts: Sites can show sign-in prompts from identity services: If you enable "Sign in automatically," you won’t need to confirm before you log in to a website with your identity service. Learn how to sign in to sites & apps automatically. Block sign-in prompts from identity services: If you block this feature, Chrome won’t show sign-in prompts through your identity service. The website you visit or your identity service can still show you similar prompts. You can still log in with your identity service through the typical sign-in buttons or your username and password.
lil psa for those who use chrome on their computer and have been driven crazy by the constant "sign in with google" prompts that pop up at various sites and didn't realize they could disable them and have been suffering in silence until now like i've been: here's how to get rid of them
david duchovny looks exactly like a dog’s folded ear
the design & message of this is the best thing i'll see in 2024 or at least this month