On Tue, 28 Jan 2020 at 15:47, Jason Cobb via agora-discussion
<agora-discussion@agoranomic.org> wrote:
>
> On 1/28/20 2:14 PM, Aris Merchant via agora-discussion wrote:
> > On Tue, Jan 28, 2020 at 12:03 AM omd via agora-discussion
> > <agora-discussion@agoranomic.org> wrote:
> >
> >> I suppose I could mirror the archives on GitHub, which would be less
> >> idiosyncratic and more resilient to me getting hit by a bus.  That
> >> would, however, imply giving up on obfuscating email addresses, unless
> >> I made the repo private (which defeats the purpose of resilience) or
> >> obfuscated the repo contents somehow (which defeats the purpose of
> >> avoiding idiosyncracy).  Thoughts?
> > You can share a private repo with three people (they've started
> > letting people do that recently-ish). If one picked three Agorans
> > who've been playing relatively steadily for a long while, it would
> > make things much safer (the possibility of four Agorans getting
> > incapacitated at once is decidedly low, absent a global crisis, in
> > which case we have bigger problems).
> >
> > -Aris
>
>
> Couldn't someone just zip the files and put them in a public GitHub
> repo? If we really cared, the zip files could be encrypted and the
> password could be put in the README, since I think most of the major
> operating systems have builtin support for encrypted ZIPs.
>
> This would allow people who actually cared to easily access the archives
> (as long as the ZIP specification survives, which it probably will),
> while preventing all but the most dedicated automatic scanners from
> getting to it.

Just put them anywhere archive.org can get.

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