In an Ever-Expanding Library, Using Decentralized Storage to Keep Your Materials Safe
https://blog.archive.org/2022/03/11/in-an-ever-expanding-library-using-decen... Memory institutions know the headaches of storing their ever-expanding physical collections: fire, flood, access & space over the long-term. But storing digital assets presents even more diverse challenges: attacks by hackers, deep fakes, censorship, and the unforeseeable cost of storing bits for centuries. Could a new approach—decentralized storage—offer some solutions? That was the focus of an Internet Archive webinar on February 24. The online event was second in a series of six workshops entitled, [“Imagining a Better Online World: Exploring the Decentralized Web](https://metro.org/decentralizedweb),” co-sponsored by [DWeb](https://getdweb.net/) and [Library Futures](https://www.libraryfutures.net/), and presented by the [Metropolitan New York Library Council](https://metro.org/) (METRO). In the utopian version of decentralized storage, there would be collaborative, authenticated, co-hosted collections. Wendy Hanamura, Director of Partnerships at the Internet Archive, said this would make information less prone to censorship and less vulnerable to a security breach. “Taken together, resiliency, persistence, self-certification and interoperability — that is the promise of decentralized storage,” she said. Librarians and archivists are a key part of creating a solution that is networked, said Jonathan Dotan, Founder of the [Starling Lab](https://www.starlinglab.org/), the first major research lab devoted to Web 3.0 technologies. “As a community, if we can all come together to guarantee the integrity of information, we’re in a unique position to create a new foundation of digital trust,” Dotan said. “When we think about decentralization, it’s not a single destination. It’s an unfolding process in which we continually strive to bring more and more diverse nodes into our system. And the more diverse those notes are, the more that they’re going to be able to store and verify information.” Other speakers at the webinar included Arkadiy Kukarkin, Decentralized Web Lead Engineer for the Internet Archive, and Dominick Marino, Senior Solutions Architect and Ecosystem lead at [STORJ](https://www.storj.io/). The series kicked off on [January 27 with an introductory session](https://blog.archive.org/2022/02/15/the-decentralized-web-an-introduction/) establishing some common vocabulary for this new approach to digital infrastructure. https://tinyurl.com/dweb-session2-resourceguide Download the [Session 2 Resource Guide](https://tinyurl.com/dweb-session2-resourceguide) Register for the next session: Keeping Your Personal Data Personal: How Decentralized Identity Drives Data Privacy March 31 @ 1pm PT / 4pm ET [Register here](https://metro.us9.list-manage.com/track/click?u=55e01f49515c93ceeb6d00bb4&id=fd1e136db3&e=8c6dec5073)
Zero knowledge protocols have yet to be implemented into distributed content addressible storage systems. ZKP could allow nodes that provide extents to also anonymously provide their geophysical grid coordinate, thereby allowing the system and/or clients to ensure physical / political redundancy of data. Prepaid rechargeable content blobs launched into a computational storage overlay could also autonomously ensure their own redundancy levels through internal index / retrieval verification and replication functions. Alternatively, non-compute nets could ensure replication through taxing the inserted blob until its balance is zero. Libraries, most being government entities, will of course just deploy extents and store among and across each other, but that implies necessary trust. Next generation will be full auto exec bots, pay for the insert, disconnect, data lives on.
participants (2)
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coderman
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grarpamp