A local priest was recently arrested for using his cell phone to
take pictures of a woman changing in a Salvation Army thrift shop. I
guess he didn't know that porn was rampant on the internet and free for
the taking. His court appearance was adjourned until January 20th so we
won't know what sex offender crime he will be charged with until then.
Immediately after posting bail though, he closed all his online
accounts such as Instagram, Twitter, Facebook and Linkedin. He didn't
have to do that since there was nothing immoral about what he had on
those sites (and, they can still be seen in the Google Cache). What is
sad though is that he had pictures of his church, parishioners, his
family, cars and everything good about himself and others posted
therein. All that is good about him is gone forever and what remains
are the dark sided news articles detailing his deviant behavior. One
"oops" erased a lifetime of "attaboys" but, such is our holier than
thou, unforgiving and vengeful society. The Facebook comments about him
from "good" people only wish for him to be shot, rot or burn.
It
got me thinking though about our zeal to digitize photographs, posting
them online and expecting that they are going to last forever; That
might turn out to be wrong. If there are photos we wish to keep
"forever," we should consider creating a physical instance of them and
print them out, then store them in "ye old fashioned" photo album. I
still have my grandmother's album, my mother's and my own childhood
albums stashed away in the attic for future generations to view. A
friend of mine has a 20 year old son and they don't have a single hard
copy photo of him. They have thousands of digital photos stored here
and there, though. Today's online, high tech and cloud data storage
system will most likely become tomorrow's floppy disc. We are currently
living in the digital dark ages and printing our photos is probably more
secure over time than merely posting them.
Think about it. If
websites such as Megaupload can be taken down, or if a social media
website can go out of business such as Zurker, iMee, Posterous, or they
can just fade away into obscurity such as Myspace, what could the future
hold for other online storage and social sites where we post everything
about our lives to? If terrorists wanted to hurt everyone in the world
in one fell swoop, they'd take down Facebook. That actually wouldn't
be a bad thing . . .
What we know about generations before us we
have gleamed from written records and old photographs. If a disaster
were to strike our civilization or time simply wanes on and what is
popular now becomes banal and trite in the future, how will historians
and archaeologist learn about us if our digital footprint dissolves, is
deleted, becomes demagnetized or is simply taken offline by our own
doing, our failure to log in anymore, care-less relatives or, our
favorite social media site where we store our pics simply ceases to
exist?
We can still read 5000 year old hieroglyphs carved in
stone. We can still decipher three thousand year old ink on papyrus.
We still have books written in 1,000 year old ink and paper. Digital
copies of our 100 year old celluloid recordings are quickly being
duplicated because they are decaying at a rapid rate. The earlier
magnetic tape recordings less than fifty years old are almost
unintelligible because they too are decaying at a rapid rate. It seems
our new technology does not have a relatively long shelf life.
Even
if the medium still exists, the technology to read them will soon be
obsolete and impossible to find. Consider the following medium for data
storage: vinyl audio records, cassette tapes, 8 track tapes, card
readers, punch cards, 5 and 1/4 inch floppy disks, 3 and 1/2 inch disks,
zip drives, CD's, DVD's and now, the cloud. Heck, I have data which I
stored on thumb drives and they are unreadable today after the old age
of ten years.
See the pattern? Not only does the digital data
decay rapidly but the hardware to read those formats is rapidly
disappearing, too. Don't expect the thousands of family photos you have
stored on your phone, the cloud, your computer, on Facebook or on a
disk will be there in 100, 50, 20 or even 5 years. As the priest in my
opening paragraph taught us, your digital footprint can be wiped out
overnight, or your cloud company can go out of business or taken down
such as Megaupload. Social media websites or your working personal
computer can be gone tomorrow taking your whole digital life with them.
There
is a solution. Get yourself to one of those struggling scrap booking
stores dotted across the country and find out how you can get your
precious memories stored in a slightly more secure photo album. And
don't use home laser or inkjet printers as they too fade over time.
Have your pictures printed from high quality printers using quality
paper and ink.
Then, instead of just posting your picture to
Facebook for your 800 closest friends to see, invite family and friends
over for a meal, sit on the floor around the fireplace with a glass of
wine and look through the photos together, sharing stories, making new
memories and maybe taking more pictures.
Time weaves ribbons of
memories to sweeten life when youth is through. Like memories, our
technology and online presence can fade and disappear. How cool will it
be for your great grandchildren to be rummaging through the attic and
find a photo album of their ancestors - hopefully it won't be a book
filled with selfies. As I look through the old black and white photo
album of my grandmother, I don't see many pictures of her but, I do see
the pictures of the many people whom she loved.
-Malcolm Kogut.
Musician Malcolm Kogut has been tickling the ivories since he was 14 and won the NPM DMMD Musician of the Year award in 99. He has CDs along with many published books. Malcolm played in the pit for many Broadway touring shows. When away from the keyboard, he loves exploring the nooks, crannies and arresting beauty of the Adirondack Mountains, battling gravity on the ski slopes and roller coasters.
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