Trump wants to eliminate black history. These digital archivists are racing to save it

Meredith D. Clark, professor of race and political communications at UNC-Chapel Hill, told Wired that museums are similar to “public trusts” and that the Trump administration’s attack on them is to decide who does and who does not belong.
“One of the things that power needs to do in order to expand and conquer is to convince people that there is no hope for resistance,” Clark said. We try to tell you: The rise of black Twitter and digital counter-trends. “From the Holocaust, the burning of books to the destruction of historical storage and artifacts in Syria in recent years, you can see these patterns everywhere.”
Even if they can become racist and paranoid wastewater treatment officers, social media platforms from X to Tiktok have now become a fact of resistance, as digital media has become the primary means of communication. The facts become easier to manipulate due to AI and the lack of restrained information and our access to it, so it is more important. Traditionally, one way online activists and educators fight back is by establishing crowdsourcing syllabus that recommends resources on police abuse, white supremacy, and educator competition issues.
“We saw this with Ferguson and Charlottesville,” Clark said of the 2014 Twitter campaign.
Foster said the country had a “teaching shift” during this period.
“Black people say ignorance is no longer a defense. People are posting reading lists, opening up their syllabus. Suddenly, you can educate on these issues, and I want to record them,” Foster said. “When keeping formal records, they usually don’t care what we think.”
For some time, the National Library and Internet Archives have been the main institutions dedicated to classifying the Internet. But, Jules said, “but, “only a small percentage of people were involved in the community, and black people studying to become archivists were not invited to these networks. ”
The Internet Archives’ nonprofit organization, founded in 1996, operates as a library: it includes 835 billion web pages, 44 million books and texts, and 15 million recordings, in addition to other artifacts. Today, many people think this is a collective memory of the Internet. In April, Iran’s government efficiency department targeted the Internet archives, which cut funds from the National Humanities Foundation that supported the archives, which cut funds.
Blacksky creator Rudy Fraser said he said he was “excited by the preservation work so far,” including what he saw from the innovation lab at the Harvard Law Library, saving federal data sets, as well as companies like Joy Media, and people like AI and VR/AR scan and visit Africans together to make them unable to access them, they have not been able to access people on them, they have not been able to access people, and people have not been able to access people.