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Eric Mack  pfp
Eric Mack
@ericmack
Journalists like to think of ourselves as writing the first draft of history. In the internet age, this is true, but in a sense we wish it wasn’t. Like many other first drafts, our work ultimately gets thrown away, burned or otherwise deleted. 1/x
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Eric Mack  pfp
Eric Mack
@ericmack
Example- 24 years ago I anonymously documented the bursting of the 90s dot-com bubble, which paralleled my own coming of age story of sorts. Then... 9/11, an economic crash, me retreating to Bush Alaska for four years. The series I wrote disappeared along with the rest of the once groundbreaking site that published it.
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Eric Mack  pfp
Eric Mack
@ericmack
The experience is common: Pour hours into reporting and a digital footprint that disappears. There was the AOL site I created videos for, another where I documented a crazy road trip with celebrities; stories for NPR; interviews for the first MTV.com; a failed reboot of BYTE magazine, and more. All of it has vanished.
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Eric Mack  pfp
Eric Mack
@ericmack
Often outlets go defunct and dark, or they’re bought out by a larger corporation and retired, or at odds with the latest rebranding or growth strategy. Most recently, an outlet told me over 700 of my articles written over a span of twelve years were being pulled offline for reasons of “SEO alignment.”
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