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[ih] ARPANET 50-year anniversary panel session with Vint, Steve Crocker, and others



History shows that the best way to preserve documents is to register their copyrights. This insures they will be forever accessible from Pirate Bay. 

RB

> On Feb 23, 2019, at 1:42 PM, Jack Haverty <jack at 3kitty.org> wrote:
> 
> On 2/23/19 10:12 AM, John Levine wrote:
> 
>> Writing, editing, and publishing journal articles is a
>> lot of work, and not everyone can afford to do it for free.
> 
> Writing, editing, and publishing thousands of RFCs and IENs, and all of
> the material on the archives of forum sites like this, is also a lot of
> work.  People either do it for free, or as part of whatever they are
> getting paid to do.   Decades of such material are freely available
> online in multiple repositories.
> 
> But "internet-history at postel.org", and others like it, even RFC
> repositories, likely exist at the whim of their sponsor.  The archives
> may just disappear someday when some contract expires.  Of course, even
> professional journals may disappear when their finances dictate.
> 
> So, ... perhaps the way to publish "a paper" for open access by current
> and future historians is to make it an RFC...?  Assuming that is even
> permitted of course.  But it seems contrary to the traditional purpose
> of RFCs et al.  The format constraints might also be an obstacle.
> 
> Or, perhaps put it into Amazon with a very low price, where it will be
> accessible electronically or even on paper by their print-on-demand?  
> Amazon seems to have longevity.
> 
> /Jack Haverty
> 
> 
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?
Richard Bennett
High Tech Forum <http://hightechforum.org/> Founder
Ethernet & Wi-Fi standards co-creator

Internet Policy Consultant

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