708
X glitch wipes out most pictures and links tweeted before December 2014
(www.theverge.com)
This is a most excellent place for technology news and articles.
It's more that finally it starts to show how stupid firing most of the staff was
Most people in tech anticipated it to run fine for a while but then eventually stuff like this will show up more often because you don't have people that actually understand the code anymore and which kind of side-effects to think about with changes
To zoom out even more: It's just one more incident showing how fragile investor-sustained digital information systems are.
Every website that came before the current crop of mega-scale privacy-invading behemoths also failed, and took down all their user data and history with them. Why would anyone expect Twitter to be any different?
My Geocities page :(
a piece of history i wish i could pull up and remind myself how far i've come in web design
Try archive.org
But like I don't know the url. My geocities are better left in my memories
I had a Tripod page dedicated to a spider in my office I named Mr. Jibbles and took low-res pictures of him with my first digital camera (came free with a copy of Windows XP). I'd kind of like to see Mr. Jibbles again, but I'm sure he's not as jibbly as I remember.
Livejournal would like a word with you.
Current mood: Amused 😄
Current music: The sound of my own thoughts...
Doubleplusgoof
Edit: leaving my typo because it amuses me
Man, if it wasn't a typo I'd think you're a fucking genius, that's a really witty one
I'm gonna steal that for all the times fascists go "oops, looks like I accidentally further fucked up society, wow I'm so clumsy haha totally accidental"
Eh. This is on us. URL shorteners and Twitter in particular have always been scarily brittle and opaque,. With nobody actively maintaining the data, why would you think that it would be around forever?
Exactly. It's always been likely to be broken by someone at some point. Url shorteners are a thing mostly because of twitters original character limit. Or at least that's when they gained popularity.