Jason Scott Profile picture
Aug 24, 2021 8 tweets 8 min read Read on X
Buried in all sorts of collections of zines, anarchist/collectivist mirrors, and everywhere else, the Internet Archive houses a whole bunch of fascinating documents on Squatting.

Besides the items themselves, the collections they live among are fascinating too.
Here's a 2010 book on squatting in Brisbane and Queensland, Australia. "SQUAT!"

archive.org/details/bca_20…
PM Press has a whole range of books you can check out from their catalog, including "The City is Ours: Squatting and Autonomous Movements in Europe from the 1970s to the Present". Link here:

archive.org/details/City_I…
As part of the awesome Sprout collection, we have IT'S VACANT, TAKE IT, from Homes Not Jails, now in its third edition. (2013).

archive.org/details/ItsVac…
Seriously, the Sprout Distro Collection is a radical publishing wonderland, with hundreds of zines and screeds to check out.

archive.org/details/sprout…
From the general Zines collection, pamphlets like Tips 4 Squatting in NYC remind me of classic BBS textfiles of the 1980s, with information and suggestions coming from who knows where, leading to you making critical thinking about the words.

archive.org/details/tips_4…
There's a mass of interesting, amazing and weird writings in the Zines collection at the Archive. Get a USB drive, grab a bunch, and start reading today.

archive.org/details/zines
One last one: If you are not sure where to start with all this, ease yourself in with the classic and well regarded PROCESSED WORLD ZINE, a group of SF temps in the 1980s who made a beautifully radical and designtastic scream against the corporate system.

archive.org/details/proces…

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More from @textfiles

Feb 29
The policy of the archive as long as I've been there is that if an unhoused person is non-disruptively sleeping on the steps of the archive, especially because it looks like a church and faintly has the words "church" on it, they are left in peace.
There was a long-time outside sleeper named Thomas Hooker who was on the corner across from the Archive for years and the way it was discovered he died was an employee brought extra food over to him the next morning after a yearly archive celebration.

sfchronicle.com/bayarea/nevius…
When the archive's front doors were open before COVID, one nearby homeless person would come in and expertly play arcade games on the Internet Archive arcade machine to pass his days. Image
Read 4 tweets
May 29, 2023
Watching people debate about AI-Company-vs-User. Here's some other things you might not know (we do this all day, it's our job).
We've had plenty of researchers, and even individuals come to grab materials at scale. Ideally, that's fine, after all, we're the Access people. But in this case, we were seeing 10,000+ requests a second blasting across dozens of AWS IPs. So we ended up blocking them.
A researcher would then contact us through one of our contact numbers or e-mail addresses (info@archive.org is a good one) and try to work with us to get data without the downtime.

Am I making this up? No. Has happened dozens of times across many years.
Read 10 tweets
Nov 16, 2022
Not that anyone was clamoring for my statement on this, but I'm riding twitter down until it effectively dies. I don't think people should stick around just because I'm here - remember that my strolling through most sites causes people to realize terrible times are coming.
But don't worry - I was here at the beginning and I'll stick around until the end. Maybe I'll even unblock @jack so I can watch the flames the way they were meant to - reflected in his dewy eyes
ImageImage
Read 4 tweets
Nov 15, 2022
Today was an interesting lesson.

First, you need to know I spend a lot of time cleaning up collections at the Archive. Moving stuff around, getting it easier to find, read, and so on. I've gone into some pretty deep piles and (I think) emerged with some cleaned-up spots.

But.
There was one collection that I had hoped to really clean up that has been around forever. It's called Old Time Radio and it's a complete mess. It's just a big top-level pile of over 8000 items. And some of those items are actually dozens or hundreds of radio shows in one item. Image
This is one of those miraculous, almost unbelievably popular areas within the archive. The ecosystem of it is deep and rich and for some people, it IS the Internet Archive, it's all we do and all we're good for.
Read 6 tweets
Nov 14, 2022
This was because originally it was considered important to know how the tweet was being generated, especially with a rich client ecosystem (which Twitter killed, then brought back). Since this place is doomed, yes, save those pennies musk
Now, I do find it rich that Emerald Mine is going "nobody seems to remember why this is in the case" like, less than a week after he fired 75% of the staff, but what do I know, I never took math past high school
It's funnier the more I see it because those people in tech who have dealt with large code/hardware/setting stacks have seen this happen before, but honestly, this is the difference between a singer at the front of a football game and an olympic opening ceremony in terms of scale
Read 4 tweets
Nov 13, 2022
I'll phrase this carefully.

Atari, the company, is a piece of garbage and has been for some time. It shares zero DNA with the company Atari as it grew in our hearts for the youth of the 1970s and 1980s.

But ATARI 50, created by Digital Eclipse, is a masterwork. Image
It is a shining example of engaging with your historical subject and making it relevant for the present day, both providing optional ease of use upgrades and ways to take it raw, and it was in its day, and switch effortlessly. It's also layers and layers and layers of reference.
I'm sad Curt Vendel didn't get a chance to see this.
Read 5 tweets

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