> We are a non-profit project with two goals:
> 1. Preservation: Backing up all knowledge and culture of humanity.
> 2. Access: Making this knowledge and culture available to anyone in the world (including robots!).
Setting aside the LLM topic for a second, I think the most impactful way to preserve these 2 goals is to create torrent magnets/hashes for each individual book/file in their collection.
This way, any torrent search engine (whether public or self-hosted like BitMagnet) that continuously crawls the torrent DHT can locate these books and enable others to download and seed the books.
The current torrent setup for Anna's Archive is that of a series of bulk backups of many books with filenames that are just numbers, not the actual titles of the books.
They should serve them all via IPFS if they haven't done it already
> Setting aside the LLM topic for a second, I think the most impactful way to preserve these 2 goals is to create torrent magnets/hashes for each individual book/file in their collection.
Not sure that's the case. I fear it would quickly lead to the vast majority of those torrents having zero seeders. Even if Anna's Archive is dedicated to seeding them, the point is to preserve it even if Anna's Archive ceases to exist, I think. Seems to me having massive torrents is a safer bet, easier for the data hoarders of the world to make sure those stay alive.
Also: seeding one massive torrent is probably way less resource intensive than seeding a billion tiny ones.