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Digital Memory & Identity

Exploring Knowledge Decay, Decentralized Storage, and the Lessons of Lost Digital Artifacts

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Digital Memory & Identity

By: FRANK HEINZ PETERSON
Narrated by: Gordon Webster
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About this listen

We live under the comforting assumption that the digital world is permanent — that what we upload, store, and share online will remain accessible forever. Digital Memory & Identity challenges this illusion by exploring the fragility, decay, and impermanence of our modern digital archives.

This book examines how our personal histories, cultural artifacts, creative works, and collective knowledge are increasingly stored on technological foundations that are far more vulnerable than traditional physical records. From disappearing websites and corrupted files to obsolete formats and shuttered platforms, the digital landscape is revealed not as a timeless library, but as a constantly shifting terrain where memory can vanish without warning.

Blending reflection, analysis, and practical insight, the book investigates phenomena such as bit rot, link rot, platform dependency, and knowledge decay. It explores how technological obsolescence silently erodes access to information, reshapes our relationship with the past, and influences both personal and collective identity. The loss of digital artifacts is presented not merely as a technical failure, but as a cultural and psychological event with lasting consequences.

Beyond diagnosis, Digital Memory & Identity offers a constructive path forward. It introduces listeners to the principles of active digital stewardship, resilient archiving, and decentralized storage strategies designed to protect valuable data from technological collapse. Concepts such as redundancy, open formats, metadata enrichment, cold storage, and the 3-2-1 backup philosophy are explained in accessible language, empowering listeners to safeguard their own digital legacies.

©2026 FRANK HEINZ PETERSON (P)2026 FRANK HEINZ PETERSON
Computer Science Programming & Software Development Software Development
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