One of my long-standing interests is in writing content that will age gracefully, but as a child of the Internet, I am addicted to linking and linkrot is profoundly threatening to me, so another interest of mine is in archiving URLs; my current methodology is a combination of archiving my browsing in public archives like Internet Archive and locally, and proactively archiving entire sites. Anyway, sites I have previously archived in part or in total include:
- LessWrong (I may've caused some downtime here, sorry about that)
- OvercomingBias
- SL4
- Chronopause.com
- Yudkowsky.net (in progress)
- Singinst.org
- PredictionBook.com (for obvious reasons)
- LongBets.org & LongNow.org
- Intrade.com
- Commonsenseatheism.com
- finney.org
- nickbostrom.com
- unenumerated.blogspot.com & http://szabo.best.vwh.net/
- weidai.com
- mattmahoney.net
- aibeliefs.blogspot.com
Having recently added WikiWix to my archival bot, I was thinking of re-running various sites, and I'd like to know - what other LW-related websites are there that people would like to be able to access somewhere in 30 or 40 years?
(This is an important long-term issue, and I don't want to miss any important sites, so I am posting this as an Article rather than the usual Discussion. I already regret not archiving Robert Bradbury's full personal website - having only his Matrioshka Brains article - and do not wish to repeat the mistake.)
I asked this question for the Q&A:
I also recently asked this of Luke for his feedback post before the Q&A was up, and he mentioned in his response that SI is continuing to grow the Summit brand in a multifarious manner. Luke also asked me for additional social business ideas, citing a lack of staff working on the issue.
Less Wrong's collective intelligence trumps my own, so I'm fielding it to you. I do have a few ideas, but I'll hold off on proposing solutions at first. I find that this is a fascinating and difficult thought experiment in addition to its usefulness both for SI and as practice in recognizing opportunities.