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1. Verfasser: Yorulmazlar, Meliksah
Format: Preprint
Veröffentlicht: 2026
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Online-Zugang:https://arxiv.org/abs/2605.21517
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author Yorulmazlar, Meliksah
author_facet Yorulmazlar, Meliksah
contents The web is often treated as a durable record of institutional and social life, yet in practice it is fragile, revisable, and frequently ephemeral. Domains change, redesigns erase earlier material, institutions relocate, maintainers graduate, platforms impose silent limits, and periods of political instability can interrupt digital access entirely. This paper argues that archiving should not remain a niche activity practiced by a few specialists at the margins, but should become a proactive part of website maintenance. I motivate this claim through a case study centered on the Pakistan Embassy International School and College Tehran, whose domain, visual identity, leadership, and physical location all changed within a short period after my graduation. In response, I built and deployed a lightweight automated archival system using Python and GitHub Actions to submit pages and media from the site to the Internet Archive's Wayback Machine. The project shows both that archival preservation can be automated with modest infrastructure and that archival systems are themselves vulnerable to interruption, as illustrated by GitHub's automatic disabling of scheduled workflows after repository inactivity. Drawing on personal experience with internet shutdowns in Iran, open-source sustainability lessons from RPI's RCOS, and the operational history of the archiver, I argue that the ephemerality of the web is not an exception but a structural condition. If digital societies wish to preserve institutional memory and public history without leaving preservation to chance, proactive archiving should become a commonplace part of website maintenance.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2605_21517
institution arXiv
publishDate 2026
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle The Ephemeral Web and the Case for Proactive Archiving
Yorulmazlar, Meliksah
Digital Libraries
Computers and Society
The web is often treated as a durable record of institutional and social life, yet in practice it is fragile, revisable, and frequently ephemeral. Domains change, redesigns erase earlier material, institutions relocate, maintainers graduate, platforms impose silent limits, and periods of political instability can interrupt digital access entirely. This paper argues that archiving should not remain a niche activity practiced by a few specialists at the margins, but should become a proactive part of website maintenance. I motivate this claim through a case study centered on the Pakistan Embassy International School and College Tehran, whose domain, visual identity, leadership, and physical location all changed within a short period after my graduation. In response, I built and deployed a lightweight automated archival system using Python and GitHub Actions to submit pages and media from the site to the Internet Archive's Wayback Machine. The project shows both that archival preservation can be automated with modest infrastructure and that archival systems are themselves vulnerable to interruption, as illustrated by GitHub's automatic disabling of scheduled workflows after repository inactivity. Drawing on personal experience with internet shutdowns in Iran, open-source sustainability lessons from RPI's RCOS, and the operational history of the archiver, I argue that the ephemerality of the web is not an exception but a structural condition. If digital societies wish to preserve institutional memory and public history without leaving preservation to chance, proactive archiving should become a commonplace part of website maintenance.
title The Ephemeral Web and the Case for Proactive Archiving
topic Digital Libraries
Computers and Society
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2605.21517