A week ago yesterday the Internet Archive launched both a portal for the Decentralized Web (DWeb) at https://getdweb.net/, designed by a team led by Iryna Nezhynska of Jolocom, and a set of principles for the Decentralized Web, developed with much community input by a team led by Mai Ishikawa Sutton and John Ryan.
Nezhynska led a tour of the new website and the thinking behind its design, including its accessibility features. It looks very polished; how well it functions as a hub for the DWeb community only time will tell.
Brewster Kahle introduced the meeting by stressing that, as I have written many times, if the DWeb is successful it will be attacked by those who have profited massively from the centralized Web. The community needs to prepare for technical, financial and PR attacks.
Below the fold I look at how the principles might defend against some of these attacks.
I'm David Rosenthal, and this is a place to discuss the work I'm doing in Digital Preservation.
Thursday, February 25, 2021
Thursday, February 18, 2021
Blast Radius
Last December Simon Sharwood reported on an "Infrastructure Keynote" by Amazon's Peter DeSantis in AWS is fed up with tech that wasn’t built for clouds because it has a big 'blast radius' when things go awry:
Among the nuggets he revealed was that AWS has designed its own uninterruptible power supplies (UPS) and that there’s now one in each of its racks. AWS decided on that approach because the UPS systems it needed were so big they required a dedicated room to handle the sheer quantity of lead-acid batteries required to keep its kit alive. The need to maintain that facility created more risk and made for a larger “blast radius” - the extent of an incident's impact - in the event of failure or disaster.This is a remarkable argument for infrastructure based on open source software, but that isn't what this post is about. Below the fold is a meditation on the concept of "blast radius", the architectural dilemma it poses, and its relevance to recent outages and compromises.
AWS is all about small blast radii, DeSantis explained, and in the past the company therefore wrote its own UPS firmware for third-party products.
“Software you don’t own in your infrastructure is a risk,” DeSantis said, outlining a scenario in which notifying a vendor of a firmware problem in a device commences a process of attempting to replicate the issue, followed by developing a fix and then deployment.
“It can take a year to fix an issue,” he said. And that’s many months too slow for AWS given a bug can mean downtime for customers.
Thursday, February 11, 2021
More On Archiving Twitter
Himarsha Jayanetti from Michael Nelson's group at Old Dominion follows up on the work I discussed in Michael Nelson's Group On Archiving Twitter with Twitter rewrites your URLs, but assumes you’ll never rewrite theirs: more problems replaying archived Twitter:
Source |
URLs shared on Twitter are automatically shortened to t.co links. Twitter does this to track its engagements and also protect its users from sites with malicious content. Twitter replaces these t.co URLs with HTML that suggests the original URL so that the end-user does not see the t.co URLs while browsing. When these t.co URLs are replayed through web archives, they are rewritten to an archived URL (URI-M) and should be rendered in the web archives as in the live web, without displaying these t.co URI-Ms to the end-user.But, as the screen-grab from the Wayback Machine shows, they may not be. Below the fold, a look at Jayanetti's explanation.
Friday, February 5, 2021
Talk At Berkeley's Information Access Seminar
Once again Cliff Lynch invited me to give a talk to the Information Access Seminar at UC Berkeley's iSchool. Preparation time was limited because these days I'm a full-time grandparent so the talk, entitled Securing The Digital Supply Chain summarizes and updates two long posts from two years ago:
The abstract was:
The abstract was:
The Internet is suffering an epidemic of supply chain attacks, in which a trusted supplier of content is compromised and delivers malware to some or all of their clients. The recent SolarWinds compromise is just one glaring example. This talk reviews efforts to defend digital supply chains.Below the fold, the text of the talk with links to the sources.
Thursday, February 4, 2021
Chromebook Linux Update
My three Acer C720 Chromebooks running Linux are still giving yeoman service, although for obvious reasons I'm not travelling these days. But it is time for an update to 2017's Travels with a Chromebook. Below the fold, an account of some adventures in sysadmin.
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