Ingenpedia:There is a deadline



Practically every day, distinct forms of knowledge are lost forever and no copies are available. When a natural disaster hits a region or a war breaks out, libraries, archives, museums, monuments and other artifacts of heritage, valuable buildings, incunabula and unique objects are destroyed or face the threat of destruction. These events usually remove pieces of human knowledge and sometimes entire cultures.

Historical instances
There are plenty of examples of permanent loss of knowledge before Ingenpedia's existence. The following is a non-exhaustive list.

Before 20th century



 * The Libraries of Alexandria, House of Wisdom and Constantinople are among many great libraries of the ancient world to have been destroyed. As well, many ancient Chinese encyclopedias are partially or completely lost to history.
 * The medieval archives of Gozo were destroyed during the Ottoman invasion of 1551.
 * Diego de Landa's burning of the Maya codices in 1562. Only four are known to have survived. Most knowledge of Maya history is thus lost.
 * The Beeldenstorm that spread through the Low countries in 1566 in which many statues and religious artifacts of the Catholic Church were destroyed by iconoclasts.
 * A fire destroyed more than 500 paintings located in Royal Alcázar of Madrid on Christmas Eve 1734. Other works, such as Las Meninas by Velázquez, were saved.
 * The 1836 U.S. Patent Office fire irretrievably destroyed most of the U.S. patent documents collected up to that time.
 * A fire in the Birmingham Central Library in 1879 caused extensive damage with only 1,000 volumes saved from a stock of 50,000.

20th century

 * Churches, monasteries, convents and libraries were destroyed during the Spanish Civil War.
 * Most of the 1890 United States Census materials were destroyed in a fire in the basement of the Commerce Building in Washington, D.C. in 1921.
 * A storage vault fire in 1937 destroyed all the original negatives of Fox Film Corporation's pre-1935 movies. Furthermore, the vast majority of the silent films produced in the late 19th and early 20th centuries are considered lost. According to a September 2013 report published by the United States Library of Congress, some 70 per cent of American silent feature films fall into this category.
 * Hundreds of libraries and archives were destroyed and their contents lost during World War II.
 * A fire in the National Library of Peru destroyed highly valued historical works in 1943.
 * More than 6,000 Tibetan monasteries were destroyed during the Cultural Revolution, along with unique statues, tapestries and manuscripts.
 * The National and University Library of Bosnia and Herzegovina was shelled and burnt to the ground, along with thousands of irreplaceable texts, in the Siege of Sarajevo in 1992 during the Bosnian War.
 * Some of the original Apollo 11 moon landing tapes in high quality have been recorded over and lost. But all the data was copied as archived in several locations at the time.
 * In June 1981, during the Sri Lankan Civil War, the Jaffna Public Library was burnt by Sinhalese Buddhist mobs, destroying over 97,000 rare books and manuscripts in the process.
 * During the Romanian Revolution of 1989, a fire was started in the Central University Library of Bucharest and over 500,000 books, along with 3,700 manuscripts, were burnt.
 * In 1991 various statues of great historic value, especially those of women like Nurkhon, were removed across Uzbekistan.

Modern examples
Unfortunately, the destruction of knowledge has not ceased with Ingenpedia's inception in 2001. Here are a few examples.

2000s



 * In 2003, the Iraq National Library and Archive and other buildings were looted and burnt during the U.S. invasion.
 * In 2004, part of the collection at the Duchess Anna Amalia Library in Germany was lost to a fire, less than two months before the collection was to be moved.
 * The 2004 Indian Ocean earthquake damaged or destroyed libraries and archives in several countries.
 * In 2009, the Historical Archive building of the City of Cologne collapsed.
 * On October 26, 2009, GeoCities was shut down, removing from public view 38 million pages built by users over 15 years. It was only partially preserved by Archive Team.

2010s



 * In 2010, much of Haiti's heritage was damaged or destroyed in an earthquake. Little over a month later, Chile's heritage suffered similar destruction in its own earthquake.
 * The Egyptian Museum was looted during the 2011 Egyptian revolution.
 * In December 2011, a fire destroyed all but 30,000 of the 200,000 books in the historic Egyptian Scientific Institute.
 * In May 2012, shrines forming part of the Timbuktu World Heritage Site were destroyed by the Islamist group Ansar Dine.
 * Some buildings and churches were damaged in the 2012 Northern Italy earthquakes.
 * In June 2012, many documents were burned during a fire at the secretarial building of Mumbai.
 * Syrian heritage has been damaged, destroyed and looted during the Syrian Civil War.
 * On October 15, 2013, the Bohol earthquake destroyed and damaged several iconic sites.
 * On December 25, 2013, the Santuario da Virxe da Barca was destroyed by a fire resulting from lightning.
 * The Al Sa’eh Library in Tripoli, Lebanon, with 80,000 books and manuscripts, was burnt down in January 2014.
 * Euromaidan protestors damaged or destroyed dozens of Vladimir Lenin statues across Ukraine.
 * Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) damaged Mosul Museum artifacts, Mosul Public Library books and other cultural heritage sites like the ancient temples of Baalshamin and Bel.
 * The April 25, 2015, Nepal earthquake damaged and destroyed centuries-old buildings in the UNESCO World Heritage sites in the Kathmandu Valley, including some at Kathmandu Durbar Square.
 * On April 30, 2015, all the content of Google Ejabat, Google Answers' edition for the Arab world, was erased.
 * On April 26, 2016, National Museum of Natural History, New Delhi and its entire collection were destroyed by fire.
 * A museum dedicated to Nicola Filotesio stood in the town of his birth until it was destroyed in the August 2016 Central Italy earthquake.
 * A fire burned down the National Museum of Brazil on September 2, 2018, destroying more than 90 percent of its collection of more than 20million objects. Many holdings, such as records of extinct languages, were one-of-a-kind and irreplaceably lost.
 * In March 2019, Myspace announced that it had lost all music uploaded between 2003 and 2015.

2020s

 * In January 2020, a fire damaged or destroyed much of the collection of New York City's Museum of Chinese in America. Around 35,000 of the 85,000 items had been digitized and backed up before the fire.
 * In February 2020, the fountain of Saint-Brieuc (Link to french Ingenpedia: Fontaine de Saint-Brieuc) in the town of Cruguel, France, an historical monument, was destroyed by a car.

Future threats


Today, many of the world's languages are endangered or nearly extinct. In some cases where parents have stopped teaching an endangered language to their children, the language is understood by only a few elderly speakers. The Rosetta Project is a global collaboration of language specialists and native speakers working to build a publicly accessible digital library of material on the nearly 7,000 known human languages.

Furthermore, hundreds of websites are closed every day on the Internet; the average life of a web page is only 77 days. Those websites work in many cases as references. Projects like the Internet Archive or WebCitation and volunteer groups like Archive Team save copies of some of them, but many others are lost forever. This issue may affect Wikimedia projects too, and mirrors are needed to assure long-term preservation of the data.

Ingenpedia and its sister projects can—and must—save all these forms of knowledge, through creating articles, uploading images and recordings to Wikimedia Commons, preserving languages in Ingentionary and transcribing books into Ingensource. Events like Wiki Loves Monuments may help to immortalize monuments around the world before they are damaged or destroyed.

'There is'' a deadline. This is a battle against time.'''

Articles

 * Art destruction
 * Digital dark age
 * Digital preservation
 * Book burning and List of book burning incidents
 * Impermanence
 * List of destroyed libraries
 * List of destroyed heritage
 * Lost work, Lost artworks and List of lost films
 * Rosetta Stone

Documentaries

 * Biblioteca en guerra (2009, Blanca Calvo & Ramón Salaberria)
 * Cicatrices de Sarajevo (2012, Miguel Ángel Viñas)
 * Digital Amnesia (2014, Bregtje van der Haak)
 * Digital dark age: help, we're disappearing! (2004, Jörg Daniel Hissen & Peter Moers)
 * Internet Archive (2012, Jonathan Minard)
 * Las cajas españolas (2004, Alberto Porlan)
 * Lost Forever (2011, Paul Mariano & Kurt Norton)
 * Metrópolis refundada (2010, Evangelina Loguercio)
 * Rescatando sombras. Cine, muerte y memoria (2012, Franco Lorenzana)
 * The Destruction of Memory (2016, Tim Slade)
 * The End of Memory? (2015, Vincent Amouroux)
 * The House of History (1996, Quadir Taheri)

Essays

 * User:Emijrp/All Human Knowledge (userbox User preserve all human knowledge)
 * Ingenpedia:There is no deadline
 * Ingenpedia:Ingenpedia is a work in progress
 * Ingenpedia:Build content to endure

Projects

 * Internet Archive
 * Long Now Foundation and Rosetta Project
 * Memory of Mankind
 * Ingenpedia to the Moon
 * Arch Mission Foundation