Internet Archive Switzerland

(internetarchive.ch)

294 points | by hggh 5 hours ago

15 comments

  • input_sh 4 hours ago
    Relevant blog post: https://blog.archive.org/2026/05/06/internet-archive-switzer...

    > Internet Archive Switzerland joins a growing group of mission-aligned organizations, alongside Internet Archive, Internet Archive Canada, and Internet Archive Europe. Together, these independent libraries strengthen a shared vision: building a distributed, resilient digital library for the world.

    • card_zero 2 hours ago
      I was interested in the others, but https://www.internetarchive.eu is a horrible corporate-looking site with a hero image, a boast about AI, a carousel of news that won't scroll with doing its slow scroll animation, a huge "meet the team" section with mugshots and boring profiles, social media links, a newsletter signup form, and nothing to say where the actual archive is.
      • ferongr 31 minutes ago
        Looks like an "organization" tailor made to be awarded EU funds for their "mission".
        • CPLX 7 minutes ago
          You'd think they'd be smart enough to pick an EU country to put it in if that's what they were after, what an oversight.
      • carlosjobim 2 hours ago
        Reading what little information they have there, they aren't a public facing or public serving organization. They seem to provide their services to institutions only:

        "working with dozens of European libraries and government agencies to build web collections, Internet Archive Europe prioritized collaboration with cultural heritage organizations to safeguard our collective history."

    • rbanffy 2 hours ago
      Also https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=48068333, but got little traction.
  • insom 4 hours ago
    That website is really struggling. Very tempting to go to a mirror on archive.org to view it :)

    This seems very distinct from Internet Archive in the US, I wonder how separate it is.

    Internet Archive Canada (I worked there in 2024) operated like it was a subsidiary, even though I think it was technically an independent organization with some shared directors. Same Slack, same archive.org email domain, etc.

    IA.ch has Brewster and Caslon on the board.

    I suspect that for the political threats of the current decade the different Internet Archive organisations need to start operating more independently, especially when it comes to funding?

    • Intralexical 24 minutes ago
      Can you share more about your time at the Canadian one? I feel like there was a big hullabaloo about it years ago, but it's not really clear what they do.
    • crossroadsguy 4 hours ago
      They use Slack? I am kind of surprised. But I am sure on the plus side, that would also mean having to worry about one less uptime.
      • insom 4 hours ago
        Slack, Zoom and Google Apps (but not for email) - otherwise basically everything was internally ran.

        The Slack has (had?) hundreds of guest accounts due to volunteers and allied organizations. It’s an interesting (and cool) institution!

    • catlikesshrimp 1 hour ago
      IA.ch shows Domain Available. Typo?
      • jedberg 34 minutes ago
        You can't register a ch domain with fewer than 3 characters. It's showing as available because that thing that checks available only looks if it's registered, not if it's allowed.
      • Barbing 1 hour ago
        Abbreviated internetarchive.ch ?
        • catlikesshrimp 47 minutes ago
          URLs don't admit abbreviations. "url shorteners" are page redirects.
  • red_admiral 4 hours ago
    Sankt Gallen's more physical archive is worth a visit too: https://www.stiftsbezirk.ch/de/stiftsbibliothek/
  • consumer451 2 hours ago
    Stop complaining about availability. Instead, create a solution.

    If tpb dot org can still exist ...

    At least these people tried. We need a p2p archive solution ASAP. Before our history is entirely re-written.

    • arjie 42 minutes ago
      I don’t think the problem lends itself well to decentralization. People have tried to use IPFS et al for this. There were even IA attempts https://github.com/internetarchive/dweb-gateway

      No one has cracked this one yet.

      • tylerchilds 30 minutes ago
        It has been cracked.

        The internet itself is the thing we want.

        We’re just constantly in denial that the internet actually does the thing we want it to do.

        The internet archive is an excellent demonstration of how to do it.

        It’s primarily getting a ragtag group to pool resources and manage them and then gossip with other groups that are doing the same thing.

        I’ve spent so much time around the archive that I plainly see a divide between internet people online that can’t connect the dots and internet people in real life that are confused as to why the dots aren’t connecting.

        The easiest way to see the dots is to:

        1. Stop trying to make money

        2. Tally the things that cost money

        3. Amortize the upkeep over time

        E.g. where do we source resources from, where do we store resources and how do we secure them.

        Like HTTP, but for physical materials, not digital.

    • Intralexical 9 minutes ago
      They've been constantly trying to set up P2P solutions. Torrents, DWEB, IPFS, Filecoin, WebTorrent, YJS, whole bunch of tech acronyms. I'm not sure much of it has really caught on?

      https://blog.archive.org/tag/decentralized-web/

      https://github.com/internetarchive/dweb-transports

      Third-party attempt:

      https://wiki.archiveteam.org/index.php/INTERNETARCHIVE.BAK

      Turns out it's hard! Or maybe just too niche. But you can also help them today, by seeding some of collections that are available as torrents.

    • embedding-shape 1 hour ago
      [flagged]
      • consumer451 1 hour ago
        My comment is a call to arms.

        I have neither the technical nor financial abilities to address this problem.

        However, as one of the greatest technical collectives of all time, the users of this website might be capable of doing such a thing.

        This is likely the greatest challenge of our time.

      • xp84 1 hour ago
        I really want to reply exhorting you to do the same, so someone else can do the same to me, but this isn’t Reddit…
  • springtimesun 4 hours ago
    Ah, good, they are also mirroring the page load speed of the internet archive
    • trvz 4 hours ago
      [flagged]
      • 4ggr0 2 hours ago
        a dev from ZH would've added a blockchain, mobile app and hosted it on an over-allocated kubernetes cluster. 97% uptime and you need a macbook pro so the website doesn't stutter.
        • shermantanktop 2 hours ago
          A south-of-the-Limmat Migros shopper would use React and Vercel, but still use raw JS Date.
  • 1vuio0pswjnm7 58 minutes ago
  • DeadEye2111 4 hours ago
    Very proud of my alma mater town to be a place for this. It’s much needed infrastructure for Europe.
  • zkmon 2 hours ago
    Anything that is being built today, based on the assumptions about the future that extend into multiple years, is bound to fade away. Because the "future no longer what it used be". What's the envisaged future context and purpose where this would save the world?
  • Vasbarlog 4 hours ago
    Hugged to death? I can’t access the page.
    • AndroTux 3 hours ago
      They just want everyone coming from archive.org to feel right at home
    • embedding-shape 4 hours ago
      Have you tried just letting it load? Took maybe more than 30 seconds for the page to load for me, but it did load eventually.
    • pedroneto3 38 minutes ago
      I am able too
    • KomoD 3 hours ago
      Yep, just loading forever.
    • Hendrikto 4 hours ago
      Same for me. I cannot access it either.
    • alessandroberna 4 hours ago
      Seems likely, same for me.
    • sixie6e 4 hours ago
      I am able to.
  • arian_ 1 hour ago
    Finally a Swiss account I can afford to open.
  • huflungdung 3 hours ago
    [dead]
  • feiz45607 4 hours ago
    [flagged]
  • idovmamane 51 minutes ago
    St Gallen has been archiving knowledge for over a thousand years. Now they are archiving AI models before they get retrained out of existence. The location is not a coincidence…