The AI Exodus Begins
YouTube version: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b-fo7O8B_mk
404 Media Los Angeles event details (free for subscribers; $10 otherwise)
a16z-Backed AI Site Civitai Is Mostly Porn, Despite Claiming Otherwise
Hugging Face Is Hosting 5,000 Nonconsensual AI Models of Real People
Payment Processors Are Pushing AI Porn Off Its Biggest Platforms
'Save Our Signs' Wants to Save the Real History of National Parks Before Trump Erases It
The Media's Pivot to AI Is Not Real and Not Going to Work
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Transcript
Hello, and welcome to the 404 Media podcast, where we bring you unparalleled access to hidden worlds, both online and IRL.
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Gain access to that content at 404media.co.
I'm your host, Joseph, Joseph, and with me are the 404 Media co-founders, Sam Cole.
Hey, Emmanuel Mayberg,
hello.
And Jason Kebler.
Hey.
So
one small bit of housekeeping.
We are having a party/slash gathering slash event in Los Angeles, July 30th, Wednesday at 6 p.m.
I'll put a link in the show notes.
But Sam, anything else you want to shout out now while I'm just doing it?
Or should people go to the event page if they want to see us, hang out and
talk about 404?
Go to the event page and buy a ticket or email one of us for the code if you're a supporter.
If you're a subscriber in the supporter tier, which means you're paying supporter of 404 media, you can get in free.
And we have the password.
So we'll have a post up on the site soon with the actual password for subscribers to get in.
But until then, you can just hit us up.
But yeah, we're excited.
Yeah, sounds good.
Again, that's July 30th, Wednesday at 6 p.m.
Check the event page for all the latest information, but it would be great to see some of our subscribers.
Jason, where are you going?
Yeah,
it's going to be at a place called Rip Space, which is like a hacker DIY space.
We'll probably do some sort of like live podcast, live Q ⁇ A, something like that.
We're sort of nailing down what it is we're going to do.
Probably by the time you hear this, there'll be more information on both the event page and our website.
But yeah, we'd love to see you.
And there'll be a party after.
Yeah, sounds good.
All right.
We have, as ever, a bunch of stories to go through here.
The first section is going to be a series of pieces written by Emmanuel all about AI,
porn, civitai, hugging face.
All of these different platforms are hosting it.
And there's been a ton of developments over the past few weeks weeks and months in this world.
So, the first piece is
the headline of the first piece is: A16Z-backed AI site Civitai is mostly porn despite claiming otherwise.
So, Emmanuel, Civitai is this popular AI platform.
We've spoken about it a bunch.
You've done a bunch of investigations into it.
We've especially covered how it's used to, you know, host models and generate pornography.
What is Civitai's stance on that?
Do they see themselves as this big provider of pornography or not?
Well, they definitely didn't used to, and we can kind of talk through where they landed these days.
But historically, Civitai, which is a platform where people share AI image generation models, They've always allowed a dog content.
They've always allowed AI models that generate the likeness likeness of real people.
They just didn't allow people to post models or images that combine both of these things, right?
So no non-consensual content.
That policy was always there.
A lot of my reporting has been about how they failed to properly enforce that initially on their own platform, but then especially off-platform.
Also, while I was talking to them for all of this reporting, whenever I managed to get their PR person on the phone phone or talk to anyone there, they said that my reporting is unfair because, yes, there is adult content on the website and they support free speech and they think people should be allowed to have porn models and have models of real people.
But that's really a minority of the content that is on the site.
And I have said in my stories and I have told them directly that that just like
as a user experience, as someone who goes to their main page, if you look at the top models, the top images, the latest models, the latest images, it's just a never-ending
stream of adult content.
But I didn't have the data to back that up.
So I've always kind of presented what a user sees versus what they claimed.
Especially, they made this case especially strongly after I published this piece that showed that Civitai's cloud computing provider called OctoML had a lot of internal discussions about the kind of content they were generating for Civitai
and they were worried that they were generating child pornography for Civitai and that really freaked out the company and they then went out a kind of like a mini PR tour with their CEO, Justin Mayer.
And one of the things he did, I think the day of me publishing the story, right?
So, like, in order to coordinate with the deadline that I gave them, he gave this exclusive interview to Venture Beat.
And he said,
Let me pull up the.
While you're pulling that up, this is back in 2023, right?
This is an investigation you wrote pretty early on, or 2024, maybe, but quite early on in our history, right?
Yeah, so this is the end of, this is December 2023.
And Venture Beat writes writes that
contrary to those figures showing 60% of content on Civitai as not safe for work, a figure derived from 50,000 images.
Today, users on Civitai generate 3 million images daily.
And the company says, quote, less than 20% of the posted content is what we would consider PG-13 and above.
So this is Justin Mayer, the CEO of Civitai, explaining to VentureBeat that the kind of audit that OctoML, this cloud computing provider, did on the content they were generating, they saw, they thought it was 60% of the content was explicit.
They say that it's less than 20%.
Cut to
recently I wrote a story about Civitai changing a lot of its policies because of pressure from payment processors.
So in May, they stopped or they banned rather all models that generate the likeness of real people and also specific types of porn that the payment processors thought was too extreme.
I wrote about this.
I published a story.
A researcher from the University of Zurich reached out and said that she has been scraping Civitai and she has like really comprehensive data.
on what exists on the platform.
And we can dig into some of the numbers if you want, But basically, it shows that their claims that it was only less than 20% of the content are absurd, and the content is primarily used for adult content.
Yeah, this is really, really interesting because you have your reporting
over years at this point, where it's just like, there's a lot of porn on here, you know?
And I think you did a story a long time ago as well, which basically showed that one of the driving forces of capital and innovation in the AI industry is to develop porn, basically.
And of course, we all know that from Sam being the original reporters who covered deepfakes as well.
Like it's always here all the time.
So you have the reporting.
You have,
not to undermine it or anything, but your experience of the website is more anecdotal, right?
As you say, you log onto the website.
I don't have the data.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, exactly.
So I see a lot of, well, there's a lot of porn models on here.
You finally have this data.
And we'll talk about what those numbers are in a second.
But you said this researcher was scraping civitae.
Um, I don't know whether they got this granular with you, but sort of how did they do that?
Did they look for all images that were marked as not safer work, or did they grab videos and analyze them?
Did they break down how they did the scraping exactly, or do they not go to detail?
They didn't technically explain how they like gathered all the data.
I'm not sure what the specifics there are, but what they the data is composed of more than 40 million images that they took from the site.
Each of those images has a bunch of metadata that Civitai itself generates.
This isn't the researchers annotating the data or analyzing it or anything.
It's data that Civitai itself tags as using its own rating system of like R, PG13,
R, sorry, X, XXX, right?
That's kind of its own method for tagging images.
And then there's other tags that could include like names of celebrities or the type of sexual act that's in an image
and things like this.
They also did something similar to the models themselves, and they did that for 230,000 models, I think, are in the paper.
I've been in touch with the researchers, and I've looked at some data that is more comprehensive than that.
I think they're up to like 400,000 is what they have, but it's not published yet in like
in a journal or in a draft.
Yeah.
So it's interesting that it's based on the classifiers, where it's Civitai itself saying this is not safe for work, which
that meme,
that gif of they just submit it, it's almost like that datafall.
So the researcher scrapes that has all these images, has all these classifiers very handily attached to them.
Well, what's the research showing?
What numbers are we talking about here when it comes to the prevalence of pornographic content on Civitai?
So
in December of 2023 is when I published my story about OctoML.
That's when Justin Mayer gives this quote to Venture Beat.
He says, less than 20%.
The researchers...
say that by October of 2023, 56% of all the images were tagged not safe for work or higher, right?
So that is already like more than double than what Mayer claimed.
The actual number is likely higher because as both the researchers notice and
as I have noticed and reported, not everything is properly tagged.
Some people self-identify their content as not safe for work.
Others do not, and maybe try to get it under the radar, right?
If you have like some non-consensual content or a non-consensual model up on the site, maybe the people who are doing that are not tagging it properly because they're trying to evade moderation.
So the actual numbers are higher.
Now, I'm looking at a graph
of kind of the distribution of adult content and
safe for work content
from the first quarter of 23 to the fourth quarter of 24.
And
Mayer was incorrect or misleading in his statement back when he made it and back when I was talking to him for my reporting.
But
from that time until now,
the number of overall images and models on the site has
absolutely exploded, as has the proportion of adult content.
It's like at this point, it looks like 80, 90%
of everything that is on the site is adult content.
I mean, that's staggering, right?
Yeah, I mean, it just,
it shows that the reason
the
hearing from this person and reading the paper was very validating is because
it shows that like my user experience of Civitai and what I thought the site is, despite what it was presenting itself as to the public and investors.
It's just porn.
It is just a porn site.
Like, I feel very comfortable saying that it is a porn platform.
And actually, when I reached out to Justin Mayer for this story, he said
he's standing by his venture beat comment, which I think are completely wrong.
But he does now admit that somewhere around the beginning of 2024,
the reason people use the site has changed.
And I think that is probably because it's like you can't deny it anymore.
Just like by looking at the numbers, by looking at the site, it's just undeniable that it is primarily used for adult content, or at least was until these policy changes.
Yeah.
I mean, I mean, that's really, really interesting.
And then you, just the last question on this article, then we have a couple more to touch on related to this.
But you brought up these policy changes, and we'll go into more detail about the exact why of this with the payment processes in a bit.
But basically, Civitai banned models related to real people in May, which is obviously a huge seismic change for any sort of AI platform.
What happened when Civitai banned AI models based on real people, according to this researcher who's constantly scraping Civitai?
Like, did it fall off a cliff?
Like, what happened?
I don't think, first of all, I should say this is a very, this is another very important number
and another very interesting finding of the paper
because they just recently changed the policy.
So the researchers have all these models in a spreadsheet with the metadata and also the links to where the models live.
So once Civitai announced that it was removing real people content from the site, it was very easy for them to check.
how many models were removed overnight.
And the actual number is more than 50,000, which is another kind of interesting.
You kind of, when we, when I report about Civitai, it's like, you know, there's Taylor Swift and there's
Natalie Portman and like, you know, all these big celebrities that have like multiple models.
And then you see there's a bunch of YouTubers and lesser-known Twitch streamers, but like, you're like, what is the actual number?
And it's, it's much higher than I thought.
It's like, I can't even think, like, obviously, there are multiples, but like tens of thousands, tens of thousands of people have bespoke AI AI models to create their likeness.
It's just like really kind of a shocking image, a shocking figure.
But to your question, I don't think they still,
they have like post-policy change usage number and post-policy change like content distribution.
They can just see
what was removed.
that was posted before
the end of 2024, I suppose.
Yeah.
So then this just leads on to two other stories.
And the title of this podcast is something like the AI Exodus Starts.
And that's where this comes in: in that Hugging Face, another
AI model hosting platform.
You have a headline here.
Hugging Face is hosting 5,000 non-consensual AI models of real people.
So are these some of the models that were on Cifati and then they got removed and now they've moved over here?
Like, what's the deal here?
Yeah, so basically, credit card companies come to Civitai.
They say, hey, you have to remove all this content, all these real people models, or we're not going to work with you.
They are not working with them anyway.
Still, even after they remove that content,
maybe Sam wants to talk about this, but we saw something similar with Pornhub.
It's kind of really hard to undo a payment processor cutting you off after they make that decision.
And that's where Civitai is at the moment.
But when they initially announced this, they were like, hey, we're making these models invisible.
The people who made them can have access to them for an unspecified short time.
And then we're just nuking them off the site entirely.
And the moment that they announced this, the Civitai community immediately mobilized and started this Civitai, or actually the Civitai archiving project already existed in the form of a Discord channel because there were other policy changes that kind of made people feel like something was coming.
And they were starting to start an effort to like archive anything because they were afraid that Civitai would remove it.
Once this news came out, it really kicked into high gear and they started grabbing everything that they can
in order to make it available elsewhere on the internet.
And
because of this research that I talked about in the previous story, I had a spreadsheet with all the links of all these real people models where they used to live on Civitai.
And the archiving project created a website where
you take that link,
you enter it into the website, and it directs you to a mirror where that model was re-uploaded to Hugging Face.
So Hugging Face is like an AI tool and resource sharing platform.
It's very popular.
It's got like a multi-billion dollar valuation, a partnership with Amazon.
They've been very outspoken about wanting to be like an ethical AI company and what that means to them.
I talk about that a little bit in the story.
They don't have any specific policy against models that generate the likeness of real people, but they do have a lot of kind of vague language about AI being
needing consent in order to be ethical.
And I told Hugging Face that I have this data, that I know of at least 5,000 models that are hosted on their site, and not just random models, models that I know were used to create non-consensual porn, models that were removed from a different,
as we just discussed, porn site because they were used for this purpose.
And I just haven't heard back from them after multiple attempts.
You haven't heard back from the ethical AI platform company about the unethical stuff happening on their platform.
That's right.
Yeah.
And I've talked to them before and they've replied to my emails.
And I don't know why they're stonewalling me about this one, but they are.
I think I can say we're recording.
Unusually, we're recording this podcast on a Monday.
By the time this podcast is out,
my story will be out and we'll see if they have anything to say then.
But I tried really hard to get any comment from them.
And I think if they asked, then I would give them all the links and then they can decide what to do about them.
But they were just not interested in doing that.
And then we'll just touch on your last story very, very briefly.
But yes, I just wanted to ask Sam for a moment.
This last one is about payment processors and sort of the power that they have in the porn industry, right?
And for those who don't know, well, sorry, I'll ask this to you, Sam.
For those who don't know, what do we mean by a payment processor exactly and why are they so important to the adult industry?
So as Emmanuel just alluded to, porn hub has had this problem
and a lot of porn sites
have to abide by the rules of payment processors.
So, I mean, when you're talking about like the different like payment processors and gateways and banks, it's like kind of it ladders up through the institutions that we're talking about.
But
so like, for example, Stripe has really strict rules against
porn and sexual content.
Visa and MasterCard stopped processing payments for
Pornhub because
there was allegations of abuse material on Pornhub.
It's like Chase has
rules about
not safe for work content, adult content.
It's because they're considered high-risk, quote-unquote, high-risk material.
So, in the same, in a similar vein as gambling or guns,
they place
sexual content in a similar kind of risk category as a bank, and then that trickles down to payment gateways and the processors and things like that.
So,
you know, it's like it's ideal.
If it's working ideally, what you get is like these banks are not having to be accountable for
abusive content, like what Emmanuel is talking about.
What happens a lot of the time is the banks end up being like acting as like moral arbiters for porn.
So
you have a lot of like
consensual adult content creators caught up in the rules against abuse of content.
These payment processors don't want to take the time to sort out the difference in a lot of cases
and just ban it all.
And
we've been talking about this for years happening to like consensual and safe
and
legal adult content.
And
it's like these other platforms, like Sepatai and
some of the other platforms that are now having trouble with payment processors, they're fucking around and finding out at this point.
It's like this is, you thought you could kind of just like get away with doing whatever, and
you were above it because you're cool bros or whatever the logic is.
I don't even know.
It was making a lot of money.
So surely it was too big for them to give a shit.
But I think now they're finding out that
the same
rules rules apply to them.
And I don't know, it's like it's, we can't really put these things in the same bucket as
legal, safe adult content.
But they do a lot of the time have to abide by similar rules.
Yeah.
And it's coming for them now.
And I guess just to wrap it up, Emmanuel,
what is the impact from these payment processes deciding they don't want to work with Civitai or another AI platform?
Like, what happens after that sort of action has taken place and what's going to happen now?
Very quickly, I would just say, I think last week I talked a lot about how
the reason I was covering Civitai is that to me, it seemed like a critical piece of internet infrastructure in the entire practice of producing non-consensual porn, and like what happens if you remove that?
Where do people go?
And something I saw people say after the Civitai announcement around real people is that they're just going to go to tensor.art,
which is a site I covered like I think the first week we launched, but it's a site that's identical to Civitai basically.
It's the same services, same UI.
You go there, you download models, you can generate images, yada, yada.
A lot of people move their models there.
For a while, TensorArt had like a tool that even helped people import their Civitai models automatically.
And on Friday, TensorArt announced that they are getting the same pressure from payment processors and they're no longer, they're saying temporarily.
I don't know how they resolve this, but they're saying temporarily, no more real people content.
They've disabled this Civitai importing tool and they're trying to come up with some sort of solution i'm i'm very skeptical that they can find a solution and still have the payment processors work with them because as i've said sometimes even if you fix every problem they don't want to come back so i'm just going to continue to track like a huge that like there's a huge vacuum now in how non-consensual content is made online because of civitai policy changes and i'm just tracking
where all this energy and all these people are going and that's probably going to be some more reporting in the future.
Yeah, totally makes sense.
Um, all right, we will leave that there.
When we come back after the break, we're going to talk about one of Sam's stories about preserving history, very much in the vein of the Trump administration continuing to wipe things off the internet.
But this is now sort of IRL archiving.
We'll talk about it in a minute.
We'll be right back after this:
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All right, and we are back.
Sam, you wrote this one.
The headline is, Save Our Signs wants to save the real history of national parks before Trump erases it.
First off, can you just give us a little bit of context of what is the Trump administration doing to national parks and the history
around them?
Like, what's the issue exactly?
Yeah, so like many
things these days that
are just like bad news, dark news,
started with an executive order.
In March, Trump issued this order called Restoring Truth and Sanity to American History.
Already off to a really promising start with that title.
The order mostly
targets the Smithsonian museum institution and that network.
It makes some really
bizarre claims about
the museums being part of this revisionist movement, that they're trying to paint historical milestones in the negative light for acknowledging racism in American history, things like that.
So
the order is mostly about that, but because it also mentions
the Department of the Interior, that catches national parks and monuments in that net also.
So
I can just read part of what
the order says because it's written like so many of these things in a very kind of slippery, vague way.
Yeah, I'm sure it was lawyered to Helenbach, but
also very wordy and wording.
So, I mean, who knows?
You know, it's nothing was in all caps, so I'm sure it got at least one
proofread.
But yeah, it says
that the Department of the Interior must take action,
whatever that means, as appropriate and consistent with law to ensure public monuments, memorials, statues, markers, or similar properties within the Department of Interior jurisdiction do not contain descriptions, depictions, or other content that inappropriately disparage Americans past or living, including persons living in colonial times.
Interesting
carve out, and instead focus on the greatness of the achievements and progress of the American people, or with respect to natural features, the beauty, abundance, and grandeur of the American landscape.
So,
I mean, if we can use our contextual thinking skills, take action, I think we can assume means
remove
or edit monuments and memorials and plaques basically at national parks or anywhere that's under the Department of Interior's jurisdiction that say anything about anything other than how pretty the landscape and the monument is.
And not disparage people, which would, you know, rules out quite a bit of American history if you can't really tell the truth about what was going on.
Yeah, so purely hypothetical situation.
You can have a sign that says, Wow, trees look nice, mountains look good, but you can't say anything like, Well, the indigenous people of this land are XYZ or something like that.
Is that basically the thrust of it?
Yeah, I mean, it's in again, it's like this, the order doesn't really use any very specific examples for the national parks, but
given the attack on like so-called DEI,
the way this administration has been moving up until this point, we can assume that it means
things like talking about Indigenous people being slaughtered in this country,
things like racism and civil rights
and all of that that actually built a lot of the, helped build a lot of the park system.
Black Indigenous people played a huge part in building the parks
and
you know were many of them were there first things like that it's just like
there's a lot of history going on in the parks that we just um are apparently no longer allowed to acknowledge um environmental justice um women in leadership things like that uh that the administration has targeted in the past already online we can assume polli
counts in this case too so
yeah uh i mean i haven't really been covered uh covering any of the sort of removal of history by the administration, but I don't know.
That just drives me crazy, the idea that you were going to delete history, Jason.
I'm curious if this stuff would be FOIAable.
Like, theoretically, it would be.
I think the crowdsourced aspect of it is very cool and like makes it a group project.
But I but theoretically, like the national parks offices should have copies of this somehow.
Like, they had to go get them printed, et cetera.
And theoretically, all of this could be obtained by FOIA,
which is,
yeah, I don't know if they brought that up at all.
I think that this is maybe easier than FOIA.
Like, FOIA is a roll of the dice at this point, but
you know, a FOIA about this, and maybe we'll file some, would theoretically capture like
attempts to take it down or like alternate versions of the
like what's being changed, etc.
Like if it, if it were
responded to appropriately.
Yeah, totally.
And I just looked it up and got the email address or the portal for the National Park Service.
So we can do that or do it through MuckRock or whatever.
But what these people are doing is sort of this other archiving project.
So with all of those problems in that context, enter, save our signs.
This campaign's then launched.
But what's the goal of this campaign, Sam, and who is involved exactly, and how are they going about it?
What are they doing?
Yeah, so
like seeing the writing on the wall, so to speak, not to use the corny pun for this particular story.
That was pretty good.
The writing on the placards.
Data preservationists from the Safeguarding and Research and Culture Project and the Data Rescue Project launched this web portal called Zero Assigns.
They're asking people if you're at a park, if you're at a national park, to just take a picture of pictures of placards and signs and monuments that
they see as they come across them to preserve them, to archive them, essentially, because
they could be under threat.
We don't, again, we don't really know what's going to go on.
Like the take action line is very vague, but
it's something where
the government is asking for
visitors to fill out this QR code survey to report signs that they think are negative.
So it's kind of like a counter protest to that, saying, you know, if you're going to, if the Trump administration is going to ask people to essentially snitch on signs that address,
you know, anything other than the beauty and grandeur of the American landscape.
and flag these placards that could fall under whatever the administration's definition of negative is, then they're going to turn around and say, you know what, we're going to archive this and make sure it's preserved in case it goes anywhere, in case it
is removed.
And
the negative, quote-unquote, negative content must be taken, again, using the words of the order, taken action against by September 17th is what the order says.
So they're launching this to basically say, we have to hurry up and preserve this in case something happens to it in the future.
But
I mean, the Trump administration has totally gutted the Park Service at this point.
They barely have enough rangers to do basic
administrative tasks in a lot of the parks.
So
this is just another task piled onto rangers and park workers
that
is silly and frivolous and totally wasteful.
So we'll see what happens actually in September if anyone is around to take action against this negative content, but that's their goal.
So
it's worth taking seriously.
Yeah, so I totally understand why the response to the executive order is crowdsourced.
Do you need ordinary members of the public to go out and, hey, take a photo of this placard or signpost or whatever, take a photo of that so we can archive it.
It's,
I don't know, unusual, weird, funny, that the government has to crowdsource that bit as well of the destroying bit because they can't even get the people to go destroy it in the first place.
Or, oh, no, that's ridiculous.
And it's so far, the responses to
the QR code survey that the administration has put up on signs to ask people to snitch on negative content
has been leaked to different outlets already.
And
the responses that people are putting into this survey are really funny.
It's like there was one that was like,
respectfully go fuck yourselves, someone put in there.
The parks belong to the people, things like that.
People are pissed.
People do recognize a total frivolous waste of time when they say it, I think.
Rarely do people drop to the parks and say, oh, this isn't, you know, perfectly optimistic about the beauty of nature.
So I want something, I want my government to drop everything and do something about this.
It's...
um you know it's you're there for a learning experience and an educational experience as well as the beauty so
yeah, people are already, and that would be something funny to FOIA once all the, once it's had some more time to marinate, I guess, the QR codes and the responses to them, because I think people are trolling it at this point quite a bit.
But that's not what the Save Our Science people are trying to do.
They're trying to actually preserve what's on the signs.
Yeah, I mean, we might be able to still
get some early on
and FOIA them if the National Park Service still has a FOIA officer or public information officer at the end of the day.
So,
the deadline to take action
to remove all of these signs or whatever potentially is September.
And then it looks like the Save Our Signs program is going to release the photos that they've crowdsourced in October, if I'm reading that correctly.
Is there any indication of how many photos of signs they've got or how many people are participating yet?
Or do we kind of just have to wait and see whether people are trying to help out here when October comes I think we just have to wait and see I mean I it they launched on July 4th
we were famously out which is why we covered it a little late but
they were hoping to get people on holiday to take signs while they were out with their families and stuff but
I think it's a little early it's only been about a week since they launched the project but it would be cool to see
to see what they get back, to see
what they do with the data.
They're going to make it public, like you said.
They just are not totally sure how yet, or they're still working on how that would work.
But I think it's, I mean, I think it's cool to get public participation in archiving like this.
I think archiving feels kind of
difficult or complex or unattainable for a lot of people.
It's like, oh, these sites are going down, so there's this big archivist effort to preserve them, or we have to kind of pull down the data and fill up a hard drive with it.
And this kind of big effort that you have to be part of a community already to participate in a lot of the time is how it looks from the outside.
But this is a nice like entry point into data preservation and archiving.
You know, it's like you're outside already.
You can just take a picture and put it on this website, and you're helping preserve a piece of history when it's under threat, which I think is, I think it's cool.
I think it's
a cool kind of muscle-building exercise for people to participate in something like this.
Yeah.
And as you suggest, absolutely non-technical as well.
Usually you have to be pre-technical to participate in some sort of archiving solution.
You have to download a browser plug-in or scrape something.
And this is just something you can do to archive IRL material.
Well, I'm sure you'll revisit it in September and October and we'll file those FOIs, but we'll leave that there for the moment.
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