/AAD/ - Archiving And Donating computer resources general - /g/ (#105853848) [Archived: 502 hours ago]

Anonymous
7/10/2025, 3:35:59 AM No.105853848
1749309312604642
1749309312604642
md5: df44ebe0c439300d36cbfe38edc76515๐Ÿ”
Useful archiving efforts and other projects to help out with for people new to and interested in archiving:

HIGH priority (If you don't help archive these automatically, the data will probably be lost forever):

1. http://warrior.archiveteam.org/
Help out automatically archive things being shut down right now by running ArchiveTeam Warrior program (or specific containers) in the background:
Requirements: Few GB of space, some bandwidth and small amount of CPU power, more info: https://wiki.archiveteam.org/index.php/ArchiveTeam_Warrior

If you learn that a site or any online data is in danger of shutting down, read through this page and contact ArchiveTeam on their IRC if required in order to have it archived: https://wiki.archiveteam.org/index.php/Projects

2. Help out automatically forward URLs you browse that are not archived on https://archive.org to them for archival with a browser extension:
https://github.com/internetarchive/wayback-machine-webextension
Replies: >>105858244 >>105859856 >>105862299
Anonymous
7/10/2025, 3:36:06 AM No.105853849
MEDIUM priority (Important overall)

3. Seed torrents for as long as possible, rare data forever. Make sure to look up a guide for your router to PORT FORWARD your torrent client port, to substantially increase your upload (and your download) speed. In low population torrent swarms, if no one is port forwarded then you might not be able to connect to each other at all and exchange any data despite having it.
Requirements: As much or as little bandwitdh you want (you can set the limits if you need to)
https://github.com/qbittorrent/qBittorrent (Recommended client, especially to replace uTorrent)

4. Archive web pages you want to have a local copy of with a "Web Extension for saving a faithful copy of a complete web page in a single HTML file with a single click"
https://github.com/gildas-lormeau/SingleFile

5. Archive videos with "GUI front-end for youtube-dl, yt-dlp and other compatible video downloaders"
https://github.com/axcore/tartube

6. "Capture or record any area of your screen and share it with a single press of a key"
https://github.com/ShareX/ShareX

7. Archive entire websites you want to have a local copy of
https://www.httrack.com/
Anonymous
7/10/2025, 3:37:07 AM No.105853853
8. Publish the data that you have archived that isn't easily or at all available online. You can easily create torrents yourself in your torrent client and then share the magnet link to it anywhere online for anyone to access and, as long as DHT (Distributed Hash Table, decentralized way to share torrents without the need for any specific tracker) is enabled in settings (on by default), your files will be searchable on DHT by DHT crawlers, local or online (for example https://btdig.com/, where you can actually also search for FILE NAMES within all DHT torrents)
(archive.org also creates torrents for all uploads automatically but their torrents shouldn't be relied on because of an error-prone implementation and since they can also break when more files are uploaded or if the item's metadata changes, which includes even getting a new comment on the item)


OTHER useful things:

- In your torrent client settings add the best trackers to be automatically added for all of your newly added torrents (helps more easily connect to peers, especially in obscure torrents):
https://github.com/ngosang/trackerslist

- Look into running a node for I2P (anonymous private network within the global internet):
Requirements: Mostly bandwidth, more info: https://geti2p.net/en/faq
https://geti2p.net/

- Look into running Tor/Hyphanet(Freenet)/IPFS/YaCy/SearXNG nodes.

- "A self-hosted BitTorrent indexer, DHT crawler, content classifier and torrent search engine with web UI"
https://github.com/bitmagnet-io/bitmagnet

- "ArchiveBox is a powerful, self-hosted internet archiving solution to collect, save, and view websites offline"
https://github.com/ArchiveBox/ArchiveBox

- Look into donating your PC resources to be used more intensively in projects:
BOINC (Berkeley Open Infrastructure for Network Computing: https://boinc.berkeley.edu/projects.php
GIMPS (Great Internet Mersenne Prime Search): https://www.mersenne.org/
Replies: >>105853885
Anonymous
7/10/2025, 3:38:08 AM No.105853861
- Additional archiving tools: https://github.com/iipc/awesome-web-archiving

- Additional links to archiving and similar communities:
https://wiki.archiveteam.org/index.php/Archiveteam:IRC
https://www.reddit.com/r/Archiveteam
https://www.reddit.com/r/DataHoarder
https://www.reddit.com/r/DataHoarder/wiki/index/ - Hardware and software for data hoarding FAQ
https://www.reddit.com/r/lostmedia
https://www.reddit.com/r/GamePreservationists
https://www.reddit.com/r/torrents
https://www.reddit.com/r/qBittorrent
https://annas-archive.se/torrents
>>>/t/

What are you archiving or want to archive?
Do you have or know anyone who has some rare interesting data or media not available online?
Anonymous
7/10/2025, 3:42:18 AM No.105853885
>>105853853
>Hyphanet
what does that do?
Replies: >>105853968
Anonymous
7/10/2025, 3:54:15 AM No.105853968
>>105853885
Hyphanet (until mid-2023: Freenet[4]) is a peer-to-peer platform for censorship-resistant, anonymous communication. It uses a decentralized distributed data store to keep and deliver information, and has a suite of free software for publishing and communicating on the Web without fear of censorship.[5][6]:151 Both Freenet and some of its associated tools were originally designed by Ian Clarke, who defined Freenet's goal as providing freedom of speech on the Internet with strong anonymity protection.[7][8][9]
Replies: >>105855264
Anonymous
7/10/2025, 7:01:39 AM No.105855206
bump
Anonymous
7/10/2025, 7:10:49 AM No.105855264
>>105853968
how does it make you anonymous, compared to tor?
Anonymous
7/10/2025, 7:18:44 AM No.105855308
20250703_165630(1)
20250703_165630(1)
md5: 5bea26844d00c214c84c516fb2f5c56f๐Ÿ”
Iโ€™m thinking about uploading some lossless music (FLAC) to Archive.org, but I wanna make sure:
Do they actually keep the FLAC files original, or do they mess with them (like recompress/downgrade)?
Ik they might auto-generate MP3s or whatever for streaming, but does the original FLAC stay untouched?
Just donโ€™t wanna upload a bunch of stuff only to find out later they trashed the quality. Anyone got experience with this? Or maybe a link to where itโ€™s explained?
Replies: >>105855824
Anonymous
7/10/2025, 8:44:43 AM No.105855824
>>105855308
They keep the originals
Replies: >>105858713
Anonymous
7/10/2025, 1:19:51 PM No.105857675
wump
Anonymous
7/10/2025, 2:20:19 PM No.105858244
>>105853848 (OP)
bump. also check out wikiteam3 which is also run by the archiveteam guys:
github.com/saveweb/wikiteam3
it downloads wikis that use mediawiki and uploads them to the internet archive. so far they've saved over 600,000 wikis and over 130TB of data.
super easy to set up too, you download it with pip.
you can find wikis that haven't been uploaded at this site wikiapiary.com.
wikiapiary.com/wiki/Category:Website_not_archived
Anonymous
7/10/2025, 3:14:56 PM No.105858713
-pray
-pray
md5: 523f74057a4645862632e34ab334b2cf๐Ÿ”
>>105855824
TY
Anonymous
7/10/2025, 5:39:27 PM No.105859856
>>105853848 (OP)
bump
Anonymous
7/10/2025, 7:42:38 PM No.105861053
braaaaaaaaaaaap
Anonymous
7/10/2025, 9:37:50 PM No.105862299
>>105853848 (OP)
Bump