Creative Commons photo/Rawpixel/CC0 1.0The growth of digital technology is making the work of archivists and future historians harder. In the past, archives mainly dealt with physical letters and documents, but now they are gifted terabytes of digital data from emails and social media. This has created two problems, Michael Waters argued in The Atlantic: First, archivists cannot process the overwhelming volume of documents quickly enough, and second, much of the communication is automatically or deliberately deleted, unlike physical letters, which — although often intended to be ephemeral — can last for centuries. The text message equivalent of James Joyce’s lust-filled letters to his future wife or Sylvia Plath’s shopping lists will be hard to find, lost in a haystack of other information and possibly already deleted. |