#lost-media-recovery

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Design
fromArchDaily
1 day ago

Cultural Centers Beyond the Building: 6 Unbuilt Projects Integrating Landscape

Cultural centers are evolving to reflect diverse architectural explorations and redefine public institutions' roles in various contexts.
Television
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 day ago

Two lost 1965 Doctor Who episodes released after being found in private collection

Two lost Doctor Who episodes from 1965 have been recovered and released after being found in a private film collection.
fromwww.dw.com
5 days ago
Digital life

The pleasure of books in the digital age

The debate over digital archiving versus physical books highlights the unique engagement and sensory experience that books provide in a digital age.
#heritage-preservation
fromArchDaily
1 week ago
Fundraising

First Aid for Endangered Heritage: An Interview with Ambulance for Monuments

Ambulance for Monuments is a first-aid initiative aimed at preserving Romania's endangered built heritage through urgent stabilization works.
fromArchDaily
1 month ago
Philosophy

When Do Buildings Begin to Matter? Rethinking Heritage in Local Time

Global heritage systems prioritize longevity and material authenticity rooted in European slow-growth models, disadvantaging rapidly changing cities where cultural time operates unevenly.
Books
fromTruthout
1 week ago

With Gaza's Libraries in Ruins, Palestinians Fight to Preserve Historical Memory

Cultural and intellectual heritage in Gaza has suffered extensive damage due to the ongoing conflict, with libraries and archives facing significant destruction.
Renovation
fromwww.dw.com
2 weeks ago

The people remodelling homes with reclaimed ruins

Reclaimed building materials are salvaged for reuse, promoting sustainability and reducing the environmental impact of the construction sector.
Media industry
fromElectronic Frontier Foundation
2 weeks ago

Blocking the Internet Archive Won't Stop AI, But It Will Erase the Web's Historical Record

Major newspapers are blocking the Internet Archive from preserving their websites, threatening decades of historical records that journalists and researchers depend on.
Arts
fromHyperallergic
1 week ago

UK Museums Hold Over 260,000 Human Remains, Report Finds

UK museums hold over 263,000 human remains, with significant collections from former British colonies, raising ethical concerns.
History
fromArchDaily
2 weeks ago

Deir ez-Zor: Raising Hope Through Heritage Documentation

Deir ez-Zor, a historic city in Syria, faces ongoing challenges from war and natural disasters, yet aims for revitalization through heritage preservation.
Renovation
fromArchDaily
2 weeks ago

"Echo of the ruins" Open-Air Museum of Sound and Memory / 1Y Architects

An open-air sound museum built from recycled factory ruins in Qingshuitan transforms a silent industrial area into a public space for listening and storytelling.
Arts
fromHyperallergic
1 week ago

Beacons in a Grim World

Two artists, Kevin McNamee-Tweed and Tajh Rust, explore themes of discovery and individuality amidst challenging societal circumstances.
#historic-preservation
Media industry
fromArs Technica
2 weeks ago

New "vibe coded" AI translation tool splits the video game preservation community

Gaming Alexandria faced backlash for using AI-assisted machine translations of historical gaming documents, with critics arguing the inaccurate translations damage credibility, while supporters contend AI tools are necessary to make hundreds of thousands of untranslated pages searchable.
Information security
fromSecuritymagazine
3 weeks ago

Object-Specific Protection: The Non-Negotiable Foundation of Art and Asset Security

Object-specific protection is essential as a primary security layer to prevent art theft, as comprehensive facility-wide systems fail when adversaries physically interact with high-value objects without triggering alarms.
Independent films
fromTheregister
3 weeks ago

Retro tech fan views LaserDisc movie data with a microscope

A digital microscope can reveal analog video data encoded on LaserDiscs through pit patterns, allowing visualization of content like film credits.
World politics
fromArchDaily
3 weeks ago

Cultural Heritage Sites in the Middle East Damaged as War Strikes Historic Urban Areas

US-Israeli military attacks on Iran in February 2026 initiated a new Middle East conflict zone, joining multiple global armed conflicts causing widespread destruction of cultural and infrastructure assets.
Books
fromOpen Culture
3 weeks ago

How to Rescue a Wet, Damaged Book: A Handy Visual Primer

Syracuse University Libraries provides practical tips for salvaging water-damaged books through a visual guide with both intuitive and specialized restoration techniques.
fromArchDaily
4 weeks ago

Archiving the Technosphere: How Museum Architecture Mediates Human-Made Systems

The contemporary technology museum has emerged as a performative participant in the systems it seeks to document. The architecture of these institutions has become increasingly fluid and bold, often mirroring the velocity and complexity of the systems it houses. They operate as mediators between the human, the ecological, and the technological realms, transforming from encyclopedic warehouses into active educational engines.
Science
SF real estate
fromLos Angeles Times
18 years ago

Here, time stood still

Scott Bakula's former Ojai home, originally listed at $1.8 million in the mid-'90s, is now on the market for $4.3 million, featuring extensive gardens, orchards, and architectural elements inspired by Greene & Greene and Frank Lloyd Wright.
Miscellaneous
fromArchDaily
1 month ago

Error 404: Architectural Memory in the Age of Algorithms

Architectural archives have always been instruments of power that determine what counts as architecture and how history is told, whether through institutional curation or digital algorithms.
Los Angeles
fromLos Angeles Times
23 years ago

GHOSTS OF DOWNTOWN

A visitor returns to their father's former bankruptcy law office in downtown Los Angeles, finding the grand windows unchanged while everything else has been transformed or removed.
Arts
fromArtnet News
2 weeks ago

Archaeologists Identify Lost Medieval Village in Polish Forest | Artnet News

Researchers in Poland have located Stolzenberg, a lost medieval village in Pomerania, using metal detection and geophysical surveys that revealed 1,500 surface anomalies including coins and building remnants.
Miscellaneous
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 month ago

A delightful day at the dump: The trick is not to leave with more stuff than I arrived with!'

A recycling centre's ReUse shop in London salvages discarded items including unusual specimens like embalmed animals, vintage furniture, and antiques to resell rather than send to landfill.
History
fromMedievalists.net
4 weeks ago

Medieval Manuscripts to Be Displayed at EXPO Chicago 2026 - Medievalists.net

Medieval illuminated manuscripts from the 15th-16th centuries will be featured at EXPO Chicago 2026, showcasing how collectors and audiences continue to value medieval book art today.
Arts
fromHyperallergic
2 weeks ago

The Tender Work of Preserving Renee Good's Memorial

A traveling photographer has abandoned his cross-country project to become the archivist of a memorial site honoring a poet killed by federal immigration agents, documenting hundreds of objects left by mourners.
Arts
fromOpen Culture
3 weeks ago

The Met Releases High-Definition 3D Scans of 140 Famous Art Objects: Sarcophagi, Van Gogh Paintings, Marble Sculptures & More

The Metropolitan Museum of Art now offers high-definition 3D scans of its artifacts, enabling unprecedented close examination and interaction with masterpieces through digital zoom, rotation, and augmented reality technology.
History
fromMedievalists.net
1 month ago

Dreaming of Owning a Medieval Artefact? Here's Your Chance - Medievalists.net

TimeLine Auctions' March 3 online sale features hundreds of medieval historical objects including a 13th-century Limoges cross, 1224 Chinese armor, Viking silver mount, and Anglo-Saxon brooch.
World news
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 month ago

The week around the world in 20 pictures

Photographers documented the arrest of Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor, Ramadan in Gaza, Russian airstrikes in Odesa, and severe flooding in France.
fromdesignboom | architecture & design magazine
1 month ago

autonomous robotic installation writes and erases history in real time

The robot repeatedly inscribes text and images onto the glass surface using a marker, then removes them with a sponge. This cyclical action renders visible the process through which present events transition into recorded history, emphasizing the instability and revisability of historical narratives.
History
Arts
fromColossal
1 month ago

The Met Introduces High-Definition 3D Scans of Dozens of Art Historical Objects

The Metropolitan Museum of Art and other institutions now offer 3D digital models of artworks, enabling detailed examination of textures, materials, and hidden details impossible to see in person or through standard digital images.
fromArchDaily
1 month ago

Heritage Without Permanence: When Architecture Endures by Disappearing

A Gothic cathedral can take centuries to complete. A world exposition pavilion may stand for six months. A ritual structure in Kolkata rises and vanishes within five days. Yet each draws pilgrimage, shapes collective memory, and reorganizes urban life. If heritage has long been defined by what endures, architecture repeatedly shows that cultural authority can also belong to what gathers people.
Design
Tech industry
fromTheregister
1 month ago

Internet history is vanishing. Researchers want to save it

Preserve historical internet operational data to enable future analysis of network behavior, societal impact, and to prevent irreversible loss of critical measurements.
fromHyperallergic
1 month ago

Call for Applications: 2026 Craft Archive Fellowship

The Center for Craft is now accepting applications for the 2026 Craft Archive Fellowship, offering four $5,000 awards to support research on underrepresented craft histories in the United States.
Arts
fromTechCrunch
1 month ago

The Wayback Machine debuts a new plugin designed to fix the internet's broken links problem | TechCrunch

"Link rot" is the unfortunate phenomenon whereby online articles become populated by broken links - URLs that once led to active pages but now result in error messages or dead ends. A Pew Research study from 2024 showed that nearly 40% of links that existed in 2013 were no longer active. Such "digital decay" occurs across a broad diversity of webpages, from news and government sites to Wikipedia pages to tweets.
Web development
US politics
fromwww.independent.co.uk
2 months ago

Inside the hunt for British Museum's missing treasures

The Independent funds on-the-ground, paywall-free investigative reporting while a six-person British Museum team celebrates breakthroughs in tracing missing Greek and Roman treasures with a golden bell.
Environment
fromBuzzFeed
2 months ago

35 Photos From Dumpster Divers That Prove Just How Much Waste We Produce On A Daily Basis

Dumpster divers recover abundant, usable food, electronics, household items, and higher-value goods, reducing waste and offsetting rising costs for individuals and families.
#virtual-museums
Photography
fromDesign Milk
2 months ago

The Art of What We Throw Away

Frozen household food waste can be transformed into artwork that records daily life, promotes circularity, and fosters community engagement through zero-waste events.
Film
fromFuncheap
2 months ago

Internet Archive's Public Domain Film Remix & Party (2026)

Red-carpet screening and party on January 21, 2026 at the Internet Archive celebrating Public Domain Day with film remixes, drinks, and awards.
Business
fromFast Company
2 months ago

Navigating the ghosts of cultures past

Organizational culture constantly changes; leaders must discern which legacy cultural elements to retain and which to remove while balancing enduring beliefs with adaptive practices.
Remodel
fromArchDaily
1 month ago

Heritage After Failure: What We Will Keep From Today's Architectural Mistakes

Failure and shortcomings often become central to architectural heritage as preservation results from evolving interpretations rather than original merit.
fromNature
2 months ago

When two years of academic work vanished with a single click

Within a couple of years of ChatGPT coming out, I had come to rely on the artificial-intelligence tool, for my work as a professor of plant sciences at the University of Cologne in Germany. Having signed up for OpenAI's subscription plan, ChatGPT Plus, I used it as an assistant every day - to write e-mails, draft course descriptions, structure grant applications, revise publications, prepare lectures, create exams and analyse student responses, and even as an interactive tool as part of my teaching.
Privacy technologies
California
fromLos Angeles Times
2 months ago

Images documenting the year of recovery after the Palisades fire

Rebuilding after January 2025 L.A. wildfires shows uneven recovery: Pacific Palisades has many permits and active construction while Malibu lags with few permits.
fromBuzzFeed
1 month ago

50 Historical Photos That Are So Shocking, They're Changing My Perception Of The Entire World

I recently gained a new obsession, and I'm ready to share it with the world: finding and analyzing rare vintage images. A picture speaks a thousand words, and these photographs tell us more about history than a textbook chapter ever could. So even if you think history is boring, I'm well-equipped to change your mind, and give you some delicious food for your brain to chew on today.
History
Artificial intelligence
fromThe Verge
2 months ago

Hundreds of creatives warn against an AI slop future

Around 800 artists and creatives accuse AI companies of copying and profiting from their work without authorization, launching the "Stealing Isn't Innovation" campaign.
Science
fromNature
2 months ago

To gain public trust, make art central to science communication

Art-science collaborations should be supported and normalised to communicate science, strengthen public trust, and develop researchers' observational, creative, and empathetic skills.
Web development
fromCmsreport
2 months ago

Preserving CMS Report: Why We Are Transitioning to a Permanent Archive

CMS Report will be transitioned into a permanent archive: no new content or updates will be published while existing material remains online and accessible.
#public-domain
fromPoynter
2 months ago

This moment will be defined by what we choose to record - Poynter

When unmarked, masked federal agents grabbed an international student and forced her into an SUV on a public street in the spring of 2025, the United States entered into a new era of federal policing. At first, it was alarming - a move more commonly associated with authoritarian dictatorships than a democratically elected government with checks and balances. Now that this tactic, and others like it, have become routine, it is no longer enough to react in alarm.
US politics
World news
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 months ago

The week around the world in 20 pictures

Global photojournalists documented ICE operations, Russian airstrikes, protests in Greenland and Sakhnin, and the Africa Cup of Nations final in Rabat last week.
fromArchDaily
1 month ago

Shaping Architectural Continuity: 25 Revitalization Projects Across Historic, Industrial, and Natural Sites

Heritage sites constitute complex spatial archives in which architecture, history, and collective memory converge. They encompass a wide spectrum of contexts-from archaeological remains, ancient and historic townscapes, UNESCO-listed landscapes, to early modern civic structures and industrial infrastructures. Yet these environments confront challenges: climate change, urban transformation, disaster, shifting social needs, and the gradual erosion of material fabric. Revitalization and restoration projects respond to these conditions by positioning architectural and spatial practice as an active mediator between preservation and the contemporary topologies.
Renovation
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 month ago

Archaeology against the clock: the race to salvage fragments of early Brisbane

In a white and sterile office that could belong to any one of the warehouses that dot this industrial strip between Brisbane's airport and horse-racing precinct, a young woman is engrossed in a puzzle. Only this puzzle comprises, perhaps, three different sets, each almost (but not quite) identical to the other and none likely to be completed. Emily Totivan wears blue plastic gloves. She is an archaeology student helping to catalogue artefacts.
Science
fromEngadget
2 months ago

Publishers are blocking the Internet Archive for fear AI scrapers can use it as a workaround

"A lot of these AI businesses are looking for readily available, structured databases of content," Robert Hahn, head of business affairs and licensing for The Guardian, told . "The Internet Archive's API would have been an obvious place to plug their own machines into and suck out the IP."
Media industry
fromThe Atlantic
2 months ago

I Lost My Library in a Fire

I had weighed that exact yes-or-no question untold thousands of times across my 60-some years of book collecting. This time was different. Weeks earlier, excepting a few hastily grabbed items, my entire collection of something like 4,000 volumes, acquired one by one over all those decades, had turned to smoke and ash in the Palisades fire. The question before me was not just about this particular book,
Books
fromwww.aljazeera.com
2 months ago

The Unknown: A Filmmaker's Search for Lost Connections

Filmmaker Simplice Ganou, from Burkina Faso, spends his time documenting people and relationships, but when he travels to Winterthur, Switzerland, he faces a new challenge: nobody wants to talk to him.
Film
fromArchitectural Digest
2 months ago

Designing When Your City Is Under Siege

Life doesn't pause for grief or fear. You might be going through something devastating but you're still packing lunches, still driving your kids to baseball practice, still showing up to work. One minute I find myself prepping for a whole home presentation and the next minute I'm checking the news, hoping and praying that no one has been killed on the streets today.
Design
Arts
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 month ago

We've scratched the surface': mission to digitise UK public art reaches 1m entries

Art UK's million-record digital catalogue reveals the UK's vast, diverse public art collection and has appointed Ben Terrett as its new chair.
Media industry
fromPoynter
1 month ago

When local news disappears, people turn to social media feeds, influencers and gossip - Poynter

Residents in U.S. news deserts rely slightly more on social media and other nonjournalistic sources than on local news organizations for local information.
fromSilicon Canals
1 month ago

Treasures worth thousands: homeowners discover vintage items hidden in walls during renovation - Silicon Canals

Picture this: you're knee-deep in renovation dust, crowbar in hand, when something unexpected tumbles from behind century-old plaster. A yellowed envelope? A strange metal box? That moment when your heart skips because you realize you might have just found something extraordinary. For some lucky homeowners, these discoveries turn out to be worth thousands of dollars, transforming a simple home improvement project into an unexpected treasure hunt.
Renovation
Renovation
fromArchitectural Digest
1 month ago

How the Design Community Has Rallied to Help Los Angeles Rebuild After Last Year's Devastating Fires

The Foothill Catalog Foundation supplies pro bono, preapproved house and ADU designs to accelerate rebuilding for Eaton Fire survivors, partnering with Habitat for Humanity.
History
fromMedievalists.net
1 month ago

Medieval manuscript lost in World War II returns to Poland - Medievalists.net

A 12th-century Cistercian manuscript looted during World War II has been returned from Yale University to the Republic of Poland.
History
fromTechRepublic
2 months ago

National Archives Embraces AI to Modernize Its Museum - TechRepublic

The National Archives uses AI recommendation-style portals to tag, organize, and surface existing historical records for personalized museum visits without generating new content.
Arts
fromHyperallergic
1 month ago

When Artists Lose Their Archives

An artist lost a storage unit and later discovered parts of their work were sold online without notification, stripping authorship and meaning.
History
fromwww.thehistoryblog.com
1 month ago

17th c. panel returned to church 30 years after it was stolen

A stolen 17th-century memorial panel from a Hertfordshire church was recovered and returned after 30 years through a keen Australian heraldry enthusiast.
Arts
fromHyperallergic
1 month ago

We Must Do More Than Simply Depict Our Lives

The Bronx Museum biennial spotlights representational works that center urban youth and marginalized identities, challenging mainstream narratives through sincere, everyday portrayals.
History
fromianVisits
2 months ago

2m heritage funding will make London's papyrus archive easier to visit

A £2 million National Lottery Heritage Fund grant will modernize the Egypt Exploration Society's London headquarters, protecting irreplaceable papyri collections and expanding public access.
Arts
fromHyperallergic
2 months ago

Archival Art Will Not Save Us

Archival work supports historical recovery and cultural self-understanding, but not every artwork must be archival and political work requires action beyond mere presence.
History
fromNature
1 month ago

An ancient Roman game board's secrets are revealed - with AI's help

An ancient Roman object from the southern Netherlands most likely functioned as a blocking board game, indicating such games existed in Europe earlier than believed.
fromThe Art Newspaper - International art news and events
2 months ago

In the age of AI, can art expertise be digitised?

Recently, AI decided that a painting long thought to be a copy of Caravaggio's The Lute Player is actually by the master, while another version of the same subject, previously thought to be authentic, is not. Both conclusions were disputed by the former Metropolitan Museum of Art curator Keith Christiansen. A similar debate erupted in March 2025 when AI declared that portions of The Bath of Diana, also long believed to be a copy, could have been painted by Peter Paul Rubens.
Arts
Arts
fromHyperallergic
2 months ago

A Video Game Lets You Take Back Looted Artifacts

A South African indie studio created Relooted, a heist game where players recover African artifacts from Western museums, reframing play, memory, and restitution.
fromArtnet News
2 months ago

British Museum's A.I.-Generated Post Sparks Online Backlash

Taking time to take a closer look is always worthwhile,
Arts
Arts
fromBig Think
2 months ago

The last masters: The international effort to preserve an ancient craft

Intangible cultural heritage like traditional Damascus steelmaking can vanish when supporting material and social conditions disappear, prompting international safeguarding efforts.
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 months ago

My rookie era: scrapbooking is like creating my own sentimental time capsule

I had always associated scrapbooking with grandmas and bored children, so, imagine my surprise when as a twentysomething with a Big Girl Job I found myself enamoured of printing, cutting, and sticking random bits and bobs into a book. If, like me, you've racked up a disconcerting amount of screen time, you may have stumbled across a multitude of craft-inspired social media posts made primarily by young women. Described as junk journalling, the hobby is distinguishable by an affinity with collecting and storing physical mementoes, such as tickets, receipts, packaging and Polaroids.
Arts
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