Ask Slashdot: Permanent Preservation of Human Knowledge? 277
Wayne2 writes "While there have been many attempts to preserve human knowledge in electronic format, it occurred to me that these attempts all assume that human civilization remains more or less intact. Given humanity's history of growth and collapse with knowledge repeatedly gained then lost, has anyone considered a more permanent solution? I realize that this could be very difficult and/or expensive depending on how long we want to preserve the information and what assumptions we make regarding posterity's ability to access it. Alternatively, are we, as a species, willing to start over if we experience a catastrophe, pandemic, etc. of significant magnitude on a global scale that derails our progress and sends us back to the dark ages or worse?"
Easy! DRM is the answer! (Score:5, Funny)
It "protects" content right?
Re:Make a landmark not easily destroyed.. (Score:5, Funny)
It's always about goatse with you people.
Re:Star Trek did it (Score:5, Funny)
about to tease you for saying something doesn't make sense
Why doesn't it make sense?
while your sig refers to a bible verse
These Bible quotes are all the rage! I didn't want to be left behind.