Many criminal records, petty or otherwise, are public record. When archived, expunged or dismissed infractions never truly become that. A traffic violation or other petty misdemeanor from 20 years ago, that has been expunged from official record, can show up on a background check because companies archive public data. So, there is a flip side to this.
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badlibrarian
There's a lot of panic and overlap in the space; a way to coordinate these efforts would be helpful.
Internet Archive et al. made noise and promises but told volunteers to stop because they couldn't actually handle the ingest.
Best thing I ever heard from the head of archives at the BBC:
Once you format shift, you will always be format shifting.
Keep your originals whenever you can.
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Damogran6
Hypothetically:
-Government leader says they're nuking data
-Mad rush to back up data through other means
-Government leader declares they've 'transferred the cost of maintaining data out of government, thus making for a smaller, more efficient, government'
I hate everything about this.
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mikrl
How does this relate to dox?
Let’s say an individual posted identifying or incriminating information online, inadvertently or intentionally, in a public place.
Then a third party decides to store it, and possibly make it accessible to others.
If the original self doxxing user then pulled the original dox, but was unable to scrub the rest, would that information still be considered public, or would it be private? Was it ever truly public? Or private for that matter?
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Teever
I made this related submission[0] recently but it was flagged.
This stuff is very important to talk about so I hope that this submission by rbanffy isn't also flagged.
Many criminal records, petty or otherwise, are public record. When archived, expunged or dismissed infractions never truly become that. A traffic violation or other petty misdemeanor from 20 years ago, that has been expunged from official record, can show up on a background check because companies archive public data. So, there is a flip side to this.
There's a lot of panic and overlap in the space; a way to coordinate these efforts would be helpful.
Internet Archive et al. made noise and promises but told volunteers to stop because they couldn't actually handle the ingest.
https://www.reddit.com/r/Archiveteam/comments/1jbgycm/us_gov...
These folks made a notable effort.
https://webrecorder.net/blog/2025-03-25-govarchive-us-and-mi...
Best thing I ever heard from the head of archives at the BBC:
Once you format shift, you will always be format shifting.
Keep your originals whenever you can.
Hypothetically: -Government leader says they're nuking data -Mad rush to back up data through other means -Government leader declares they've 'transferred the cost of maintaining data out of government, thus making for a smaller, more efficient, government'
I hate everything about this.
How does this relate to dox?
Let’s say an individual posted identifying or incriminating information online, inadvertently or intentionally, in a public place.
Then a third party decides to store it, and possibly make it accessible to others.
If the original self doxxing user then pulled the original dox, but was unable to scrub the rest, would that information still be considered public, or would it be private? Was it ever truly public? Or private for that matter?
I made this related submission[0] recently but it was flagged.
This stuff is very important to talk about so I hope that this submission by rbanffy isn't also flagged.
[0] https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=43543075
I wonder. Maybe for this would be blockchain actually usefull technology?