One Man Battles Web Rot to Save Lost History
For fifteen years, one information scientist has quietly built a library of stable links while the rest of the web crumbled around it and the research community finally has the data to explain why that work matters.
The Morning the Citation Died It happens quietly. No alert sounds. No signal banner. A researcher clicks a link embedded in a 2009 journal article a primary source, a dataset, a foundational framework and the browser returns a 404. The page is gone. Not moved. Not redirected. Simply erased by time, server shutdowns, institutional budget cuts, or the simple entropy of the living web. This is link rot, and it has been quietly dismantling the foundation of academic citation for decades. But while most researchers...
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