Archivists are racing to preserve Google+ before it shuts down next month.
In a poston Reddit, the Archive Teamannounced its mission to preserve and backup Google+ content to the Internet Archive. Google will commence the shutdown of its failedsocial network project on April 2.
According to the archivists, only public Google+ posts will be saved. Private posts and posts that have previously been deleted will not be archived. If a Google+ user does not want their content archived, the team behind the project recommends putting in a request to remove specific pageswith the Internet Archive.
There are some technical limitations to even what public content will be archived. The Archive Team says that all comments on a page may not be archived because Google+ only displays a subset of a post’s comments as static HTML.
Multimedia, such as images and videos, specifically high definition content, will not be preserved at full resolution.
Google announced the end of Google+ in the wake of twoseparate security breacheslast year related to the company’s failed social experiment. The platform never really took off — and certainly was no competition for Facebook. Former Google employees who worked on the project have since sharedtheir first person accounts of how Google+ was seemingly destined to fail.
Google+ users and internet archivists interested in learning more or possibly helping with the archival project can check out the Reddit post here.
Copyright © 2023 Powered by
The race to preserve (almost) everything on Google+ before it shuts down-燕尔新婚网
sitemap
文章
958
浏览
3
获赞
74259
A small child tried to fight Gritty
Gritty has been attacked by yet another small child.The Philadelphia Flyers mascot got into a scufflApple updates AirTag setup with stalking in mind
A cautionary finger wag ought to do the trick. Apple on Thursday announced a series of updates to it'How it started' meme takes over Twitter timelines
What is more 2020 than a sweet, romantic trend turning into a meme for life falling apart? The "HowJohn Lewis mourners push back against hypocritical GOP remembrances
As the nation mourns the loss of Representative John Lewis (D-GA), a lifelong civil rights advocateZoom hackers are spoofing HR meeting invites to steal user login info
Zoommay have fixedmany of its own security issues, but it’ll never be immune to hackers tryingL'Oreal debuts the Colorsonic and Coloright at CES 2022
Recall: April 2020. The pandemic had just begun to settle in, and the quarantined population was begAustralia's new laws could force Twitter, Facebook to take down 'cyber
Australian adults can now tattle to the government if they're being bullied on social media. New lawElon Musk claims feature from Hummer EV is coming to quad
Elon Musk teased a new feature for the delayed Tesla Cybertruck that sounds heavily borrowed from aTiger Woods won the Masters, and everybody loves a comeback
Dramatic comebacks are usually the stuff of sports movies, complete with sweeping music and tearfulLocket app will put your face on your friends' home screen
A new app, Locket, has risen to the top of Apple's App Store charts over the past few days and I hatRite Aid surveilled customers using facial recognition tech with links to China
The next time you pop into your local drugstore to grab a gallon of milk, remember there’s a c'You changed' meme perfectly explains why we're so different in 2020
Are you the same person that you were back in January, or has the overwhelming, relentless chaos ofLenovo Flex 5G laptop now available through Verizon
5G isn't just for phones. Starting this week, you can buy a real, actual laptop that connects to the'I have a joke' is Twitter's newest meme you can't escape
2020 has already ushered in new and sometimes painful memes — which, given that many of us areNeil Young's music will no longer be available on Spotify
This may be your last chance to listen to "Heart of Gold" on Spotify, Neil Young fans.According to a