May 2026

Resurrecting Networks: On Eulogies, Dead Tech, and Fifteen Years of Open Government

On Friday 22 May, Internet Archive Europe’s Amsterdam space hosted two very different events that, in retrospect, belonged together.

A Funeral for the Networks We Lost

The afternoon began with Resurrecting Networks, a workshop led by Sevgi Tan that asked participants to do something rarely granted in tech culture: slow down and grieve.

Tan’s practice draws on media archaeology and Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein, taking deprecation seriously as an event worth marking. The premise is simple and slightly radical. When a network dies, it doesn’t just disappear. It takes with it communities, habits, ways of communicating, and forms of trust that were specific to it. AOL chat rooms were not just a primitive version of Slack. MSN Messenger was not merely a precursor to WhatsApp. They were particular places, with particular people in them, and when they went, something real was lost.

Participants arrived in funeral attire, as requested. Together, the group built a graveyard: a collective list of dead networks. Then came the eulogies. Some people wrote short paragraphs. Some read poems. Some brought physical objects. Singing was involved. The format was deliberately open, the mood somewhere between solemn and warm.

What made the session land wasn’t nostalgia, exactly. It was the act of paying attention. Tan’s framing insists that slowing down around technological loss is a form of resistance to the consumerist logic that treats obsolescence as natural, inevitable, and not worth mourning. If we want to understand what we’re building now, it helps to understand what we’ve already buried and why.

For an organisation that archives the web, that question is never abstract. What survives depends on choices: what gets collected, what gets preserved, what gets remembered. Resurrecting Networks made those choices visible and personal.

Fifteen Years of Open Government, Celebrated with Cake

The borrel that followed brought a different energy. Together with Open State Foundation, IAE marked fifteen years of the Open Government Partnership as part of Open Government Week, an annual moment when countries and civil society organisations across the world take stock of what transparent, accountable governance actually looks like in practice.

There were drinks, Affligem, Fritz Kola, red velvet cake, and the kind of conversations that don’t fit neatly into a programme. A short presentation anchored the afternoon at 16:00, but the real work of the evening happened in the margins: practitioners, archivists, and open government advocates comparing notes, making connections, and arguing about what progress looks like.

The Open Government Partnership launched in 2011 on the premise that governments perform better when they operate in the open. Fifteen years on, the gaps between commitment and practice remain wide in many places. But the coalition has grown, and the principle has held.

For IAE, open government and digital preservation are not separate issues. Archives are how accountability becomes possible over time. A government that controls what gets preserved controls, in the end, what can be known about it. Open access to public records, open data, and the right of memory institutions to collect and keep digital materials are all parts of the same argument.

The afternoon made that connection visible, without needing to say it out loud.

Both events are over, but the questions they raised aren’t. If your organisation works in this space, we’d love to hear from you.

Resurrecting Networks: On Eulogies, Dead Tech, and Fifteen Years of Open Government Read Post »

The Libraries and Archives Copyright Alliance (LACA) Joins Our Future Memory

The Libraries and Archives Copyright Alliance (LACA) has signed the Statement on the Four Digital Rights of Memory Institutions, adding one of the UK’s most important copyright advocacy bodies to the growing Our Future Memory movement.

LACA is the principal UK organisation lobbying on behalf of the library, information, and archive professions and their users for fair copyright practices. Its membership spans the breadth of the sector: from national libraries and university consortia to archive bodies and professional associations. When LACA speaks on copyright, it speaks for the people who run the institutions that keep public knowledge alive.

Christy Henshaw, Co-Chair of LACA, explained the decision to sign:

“The UK Libraries and Archives Copyright Alliance advocates for a fair and balanced copyright framework, one that upholds the rights of copyright holders while equally recognising the essential freedoms of users. By signing this Statement, we affirm our support for Our Future Memory’s call to protect, and indeed strengthen, the vital role of memory institutions as custodians of knowledge in a digital age where access to trusted information is so critical to our society.”

The Movement Expands

LACA’s endorsement is a signal from the UK copyright community that the digital rights of memory institutions are a mainstream concern, not a niche one. Libraries and archives hold knowledge for everyone who needs it, now and in the future. Getting that right in law requires exactly the kind of sustained, expert advocacy LACA brings.

Call to Action

Our Future Memory continues to grow. If your organisation has not yet signed, we encourage you to do so. No institution is too small, and the breadth of the sector matters as much as the weight of its largest members.

🔗 Sign the Statement: https://ourfuturememory.org

📧 Contact the Campaign: campaigns@internetarchive.eu 

Learn More

Previous Informational Webinar

If you missed our recent informational webinar, “Protect Our Future Memory: Join the Call for Library Digital Rights,” you can still watch the session to learn more about the growing international movement to secure the digital rights memory institutions have long held in the physical world.

Podcast: Hear the Voices Behind the Movement

To explore the origins, urgency, and global significance of the Four Digital Rights, we encourage you to listen to the Future Knowledge podcast episode on this campaign. Featuring leaders from across the library, archive, and digital rights communities, the episode offers essential context on why these rights matter—and what’s at stake.

The Libraries and Archives Copyright Alliance (LACA) Joins Our Future Memory Read Post »

Scroll to Top