Alex H
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archivealex.bsky.social
Alex H
@archivealex.bsky.social
Archivist, here for all things archives, digital preservation, critical technology. Probably on a train. Uses likes as bookmarks. Slowly building up account here...
Reposted by Alex H
British Library workers withdraw their labour again!
Mon 8th to Sun 14th!
Improved offers (“we have no money”) are inadequate!
Fair demands for fair(er) pay are reiterated!
Please support the strike!
Cancel / postpone!
Visit the picket (in Midland Road)!
If you are a Reader please join for a chat!
December 5, 2025 at 10:41 AM
Reposted by Alex H
It's not just Gaza. From the West Bank to Syria and Lebanon, Israel's onslaught continues | Nesrine Malik
It's not just Gaza. From the West Bank to Syria and Lebanon, Israel's onslaught continues | Nesrine Malik
Broken ceasefires, bombing, ground incursions and mounting deaths: Israeli imperialism is now expanding across the region, says Guardian columnist Nesrine Malik
www.theguardian.com
December 1, 2025 at 6:22 AM
Reposted by Alex H
“When you allow a machine to summarize your reading, to generate the ideas for your essay, and then to write that essay, you’re not learning how to read, think, or write.“
November 30, 2025 at 9:40 AM
Reposted by Alex H
Some great books and articles on archives and libraries that came out in 2025.

In no specific order.

🧵
November 30, 2025 at 1:18 PM
Reposted by Alex H
The diplomatic "achievement" of the ceasefire was to recalibrate the tempo of the genocide sufficiently to get it off the front pages and the news bulletins, thus alleviating the political pressure on Israel's western accomplices.

www.theguardian.com/world/2025/n...
Israel still committing genocide in Gaza, Amnesty International says
The NGO’s chief says last month’s ceasefire ‘risks creating a dangerous illusion that life in Gaza is returning to normal’
www.theguardian.com
November 27, 2025 at 7:46 PM
Reposted by Alex H
I've written up the findings from our work with people and organisations who have used AI notetakers in meetings, identified 9 risks and a bunch of mitigation strategies. www.careful.industries/blog/2025-11...
Nine risks caused by AI notetakers — Careful Industries
AI transcription tools are not currently mature or reliable enough to be regarded as an always on, single-source of truth for meeting notes. Nine common risks, and six possible mitigations.
www.careful.industries
November 21, 2025 at 7:09 AM
Reposted by Alex H
From hospital records to family papers, collections give unique insights into health across time and place.

But they don’t just have historical value. Collections have incredible potential for discovery research – and we need to unlock it.

Learn more in our report: wellcome.org/insights/rep...
Archives, manuscripts and material culture in health and wellbeing research | Reports | Wellcome
Archives, manuscripts and material culture collections hold profound potential for advancing knowledge about life, health and wellbeing. This report examines how these collections are currently used i...
wellcome.org
November 18, 2025 at 4:34 PM
Reposted by Alex H
I think this is *the* licensing issue of our time.

Whether it's prohibiting fascist uses or stopping AI training, liberal open licenses are falling down.

I still like CC BY-SA, forcing to share derivatives, but am not sure a license change is the technical solution to this social problem.
"That's a problem for me. You see, I wanna make my software freely available to everyone in the world except those guys specifically. That very particular bunch of autocratic corpo-states are actively destroying the world I'm trying to pro-socially enrich as a commoner."
Open Source Power
We have to talk about open source licensing.
blog.muni.town
November 16, 2025 at 11:24 AM
Reposted by Alex H
In Germany, I developed a slight obsession with political stickers – and especially the unhinged pro-Israel stickers from the German left's creepy philosemitic neocons, the "anti-Germans" (the most German Germans). For @thediasporist.bsky.social, I wrote up some of the wildest examples
Stickers Against Germany – the Diasporist
The antideutsch leftists papering cities in pro-Israel stickers
thediasporist.de
August 8, 2025 at 8:00 PM
Reposted by Alex H
I do, of course, have a paragraph from "Why We Fear AI" for this
November 11, 2025 at 8:36 PM
Reposted by Alex H
Amelia Acker: "Each chapter introduces data archiving processes that relate to the evolution of data sovereignty...: from magnetic tape + timesharing computer models from the 1950s,... to file structures + virtual containers in cloud-based information services over the past 40 yrs" — open access!
Archiving Machines
Archiving Machines advances our understanding of memory, information, and data by charting the struggle between the computing technologies that archive data ...
mitpress.mit.edu
November 11, 2025 at 11:28 PM
Reposted by Alex H
“And then you have librarians who are experiencing a real existential crisis because they are getting asked by their jobs to promote [AI] tools that produce more misinformation. It's the most, like, emperor-has-no-clothes-type situation that I have ever witnessed.” - Alison Macrina
AI Is Supercharging the War on Libraries, Education, and Human Knowledge
"Fascism and AI, whether or not they have the same goals, they sure are working to accelerate one another."
www.404media.co
November 7, 2025 at 7:15 AM
Reposted by Alex H
Data rescue for World Digital Preservation Day 2025
Today, Thursday 6 November 2025 if I actually manage to finish and publish this today, is World Digital Preservation Day so I thought I would try and get a blog post out about some work I’ve been doing to rescue at-risk data. I’ve briefly mentioned this in my post about Library of Congress Subject Headings but not in much detail. The project is Safeguarding Research & Culture and I got involved back in March or April when Henrik reached out on social media looking for someone with library & metadata experience to contribute. I said that I wasn’t a Real Librarian but I’d love to help if I could, and now here we are. The concept is simple: download public datasets that are at risk of being lost, and replicate them as widely as possible to make them hard to destroy, though obviously there’s a lot of complexity buried in that statement. When the Trump administration first took power, there were a lot of people around the world worried about this issue and wanting to help, so while there are a number of institutions & better resourced groups doing similar things, we aim to complement them by mobilising grassroots volunteers. Downloading data isn’t always straightforward. It may be necessary to crawl an entire website, or query a poorly-documented API, or work within the constraints of rate-limiting so as not to overload an under-resourced server. That takes knowledge and skill, so part of the work is guiding and mentoring new contributors and fostering a community that can share what they learn and proactively find and try out new tools. We also need people to be able to find and access the data, and volunteers to be able to contribute their storage to the network. We distribute data via the venerable BitTorrent protocol, which is very good at defeating censorship and getting data out to as many peers as possible as quickly as possible. To make those torrents discoverable, our dev team led by the incredible Jonny have built a catalogue of dataset torrents, playfully named SciOp. That’s built on well-established linked data standards like DCAT, the Data Catalogue Vocabulary, so the metadata is standardised and interoperable, and there’s a public API and a developing commandline client to make it even easier to process and upload datasets. There are even RSS and RDF feeds of datasets by tag, size, threat status or number of seeds (copies) in the network that you can plug into your favourite BitTorrent client to automatically start downloading newly published datasets. There are even exciting plans in the works to make it federated via ActivityPub, to give us a network of catalogues instead of just a single one. We’re accidentally finding ourselves needing to push the state of the art in BitTorrent client implementations. If you’re familiar with the history of BitTorrent as a favoured tool for _ahem_ less-than-legal media sharing, it probably won’t surprise you that most current BitTorrent clients are optimised for working with single audio-visual streams of about 1 to 2½ hours in length. Our scientific & cultural data is much more diverse than that, and the most popular clients can struggle for various reasons. In many cases there are BEPs (BitTorrent Enhancement Proposals) to extend the protocol to improve things, but these are optimal features that most clients don’t implement. The collection of BEPs that make up “BitTorrent v2” is a good example: most clients don’t support v2 well, so most people don’t bother making v2-compatible torrents, but that means there’s no demand to implement v2 in the clients. We are planning to make a scientific-grade BitTorrent client as a test-bed for these and other new ideas. Myself I’m running one of a small number of “super” nodes in the swarm, with much more storage available than the average laptop or desktop, and often much better bandwidth too. That’s good, because some of our datasets run to multiple terabytes, plus to ensure new nodes can get started quickly we need to have some always-on nodes with most of the data available to others. Since BitTorrent is truly peer-to-peer, it doesn’t matter how many people have a copy of a given dataset, if none of them are online no-one else can access it. This is all very technically interesting, but communications, community, governance, policy, documentation, funding are also vitally important, and for us these are all works in progress. We need volunteers to help with all of this, but especially those less-technical aspects. If you’re interested in helping, please drop us a line at contact@safeguar.de, or join our community forum and introduce yourself and your interests. If you want to contribute but don’t feel you have the time or skills, well, to start with we’re more than happy to show you the ropes and help you get started, but as an alternative, I’m running one of those “super” nodes and you can contribute to my storage costs via GoFundMe: even a few quid helps. I currently have 3x 6TB hard drives with no space to mount them, so I’m currently in need of a drive cage to hold them and plug them into my server. Special shout-out also to our sibling project, the Data Rescue Project, who are doing amazing work on this and often send us requests for websites or complex datasets for our community to save. I’ve barely scratched the surface here, but I _really_ want to actually get this post out for WDPD so I’m going to stop here and hopefully continue soon!
erambler.co.uk
November 6, 2025 at 9:32 PM
Reposted by Alex H
Extraordinary story from @sheffieldtribune.bsky.social: A London lawyer bought hundreds of Sheffield freeholds. Then the ‘very aggressive’ letters arrived.

One woman: “It broke my heart, that was my savings towards a new car...He has just wiped me out.”

www.sheffieldtribune.co.uk/a-london-law...
A London lawyer bought hundreds of Sheffield freeholds. Then the ‘very aggressive’ letters arrived
Exclusive: The Tribune can reveal that Andrew Milne has threatened leaseholders with high court action. It ‘broke my heart’ one woman says
www.sheffieldtribune.co.uk
November 6, 2025 at 2:55 PM
Reposted by Alex H
You will be ABSOLUTELY STUNNED to discover that the “flaggers” are a nationwide coalition of racists and crooks.
"it is striking how many of the key players we have looked into — the people who have gone out of their way to put up hundreds of flags — seem anything but ordinary."

manchestermill.co.uk/the-men-who-...
The men who raised the flags
Nigel Farage says this summer’s movement was led by ‘ordinary people’ expressing their patriotism. That’s not what we found
manchestermill.co.uk
November 2, 2025 at 8:29 AM
Reposted by Alex H
The National Digital Stewardship Alliance (NDSA) Digital Preservation Conference playlist is now available on YouTube with 37 videos from the conference!

#digipres #DigitalPreservation #archives #library 📚

www.youtube.com/playlist?lis...
NDSA's Digital Preservation Conference 2025 - YouTube
Presentation recordings from the National Digital Stewardship Alliance's Digital Preservation Conference held October 9 and 10, 2025 virtually. The conferenc...
www.youtube.com
October 28, 2025 at 10:27 PM
Reposted by Alex H
Child benefit payments stopped based on incomplete data - people who went on holiday for short periods had payments stopped because travel data seemed to show they had left the country permanently, but they had done no such thing.

Tell me again how automation is seamless and efficient?
HMRC cuts child benefit for 35,000 families based on incomplete travel data
UK tax agency apologises after flagging people as having emigrated, often when they return via different routes
www.theguardian.com
October 28, 2025 at 7:20 AM
Reposted by Alex H
Asylum seekers, housed in hotels in Manchester, are reaching out in their own words to address the concerns of the local community.

Please take a minute to read their letter, & share it with the people in your life who need to hear the truth about the people they are protesting.
October 27, 2025 at 11:41 AM
Reposted by Alex H
The risible wages are well-known in the wider field of the library, museum, gallery and archive world. I’d like to think public opinion is with the people who make the place click day-in-day-out; they deserve better.
Knowledge may be free but labour isn’t: spread the wealth and pay the workers!
October 26, 2025 at 8:00 AM
Reposted by Alex H
This applies to online events hosted by the British Library. Digital pickets are still pickets.
No scabbing, please. Support your striking library workers.
Some of our Reading Rooms will be closed between 27 October and 9 November due to planned strike action at our St Pancras site, and there may be other short notice disruption.

To check what’s impacted, please visit our website: bit.ly/StrikeAction...
October 25, 2025 at 10:34 AM
Reposted by Alex H
Every. Damn. Time.
Promoters just put your set times somewhere on the day of the gig challenge (impossible)
October 23, 2025 at 11:06 AM
Reposted by Alex H
Massive new study out from a large number of news organisations - random text generator chatbots are not a reliable source of information.

Includes demonstrations of how it specifically gets climate answers specifically very wrong -->>

www.bbc.co.uk/aboutthebbc/...
October 22, 2025 at 7:29 AM
Reposted by Alex H
What does it mean to use #genAI "responsibly" in research? In this post, @petertarras.bsky.social & I respond to a taxonomy which equates disclosure of use with transparency & responsibility. We object to this & call for more conversations about how & why it's used, who is harmed, & who benefits.
Andrea Reyes Elizondo @altibel.bsky.social and I have responded to a blog, recently published on @leidenmadtrics.bsky.social, which argued that using AI responsibly in research means being transparent about it. We object that supposed transparency obscures more fundamental ethical questions.
Why AI transparency is not enough
Recently, a taxonomy to disclose the use of generative AI (genAI) in research outputs was presented as an approach that creates transparency and thereby supports responsible genAI use. In this post we...
www.leidenmadtrics.nl
October 15, 2025 at 12:21 PM
Reposted by Alex H
A candid and transparent postmortem of two technical incidents we've had on Knowledge Commons recently, brightened up at the end with a summary of the good work we're doing in moving development forward.

about.hcommons.org/2025/10/14/d...
October 14, 2025 at 2:00 PM