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Wikipedia Education Science

Wikipedia Seeks Photos of 20 Million Artifacts Lost in Brazil Museum Fire (cnet.com) 56

On Sunday haruchai (Slashdot user #17,472) wrote that a 200-year-old museum in Brazil "is burning to the ground and it's likely the entire collection of some 20 million artifacts will be lost." Now CNET reports: The items in the Museu Nacional in Rio may be gone, but Wikipedia doesn't want them to be forgotten... "Did you take a photo of any of them? Help us preserve the memories of as many as we can and add them to @wikicommons," Wikipedia tweeted Tuesday, with an explanation on how to do so...

"The fire at the National Museum of Brazil has led to the devastating loss of 200 years of memory," Katherine Maher, executive director of the Wikimedia Foundation, said in a statement. "At Wikipedia, our community is hard at work every day curating a living record of our shared heritage," Maher said. "With this effort, we're asking people everywhere to join our global community and help the world recover from this collective tragedy."

Wikipedia's tweet included an image urging people to "Add your photo to the sum of all knowledge..."
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Wikipedia Seeks Photos of 20 Million Artifacts Lost in Brazil Museum Fire

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  • by xack ( 5304745 ) on Saturday September 08, 2018 @03:01PM (#57276704)
    Deletionists existed at the time of the library of Alexandra. Put the photos on Archive.org instead.
    • by Brett Buck ( 811747 ) on Saturday September 08, 2018 @03:15PM (#57276758)

      Nothing should be trusted to Wikipedia, some nitwit was reverting my changes *line by line* the other day, and then deleted stuff that I hadn't entered. The reported me to the "authorities" for asking what the hell he was doing. Assholes sit on pages or looking for edits. I have had grammar fixes reverted because they were *not referenced*, when the issue was obvious subject-verb disagreement that would have gotten you an F in 3rd grade reading class.

      • To be fair, the request was to upload images to Wikimedia Commons, not Wikipedia itself (who don't host media files AFAIK). The rules and processes for deletions are differerent, and most users can't delete images on Wikimedia Commons, they can only request they get deleted (with a specific reason). Details. [wikimedia.org]

  • A new future... (Score:4, Interesting)

    by Archfeld ( 6757 ) <treboreel@live.com> on Saturday September 08, 2018 @03:53PM (#57276954) Journal

    I would love to see museums that haven't been devastated do something of this nature as an insurance policy. Just think if could log into say, 2nd life and virtually tour the Louvre or the various Smithsonian institutions and see their complete works. It would never replace going there but would certainly be an experience, especially for those who would never get there anyways. The preservation and increased exposure of the greatest works of art in the world could be one of the most important uses of the internet. Furthering education and appreciation to a group that might never get such an opportunity otherwise.

    • "I would love to see museums that haven't been devastated do something of this nature as an insurance policy. Just think if could log into say, 2nd life and virtually tour the Louvre ..."

      Mission accomplished

      Louvre
      http://www.louvre.fr/en/visite... [louvre.fr]

      Guggenheim
      http://www.guggenheim.org/new-... [guggenheim.org]

      National Gallery of Arts
      http://www.nga.gov/exhibitions... [nga.gov]

      British Museum
      http://www.britishmuseum.org/w... [britishmuseum.org]

      Smithsonian
      http://www.mnh.si.edu/panorama... [si.edu]

      The Met
      https://www.google.com/cultura... [google.com]

      and so on

    • I would be amazed if all the artifacts weren't already documented properly TBH.

      Museums usually only display a small % of their total collections at any one time, lots of stuff never ever goes on show. Having photographic records, marked with scale and a reference code to the records for the piece is standard practice.

      • by rtb61 ( 674572 )

        I would be surprised if the most valuable artefacts have not already changed hands. You know pilfer stuff for weeks and then burn it down to hide what is missing. So which is the more likely accident or major theft. What no smoke alarms, no fire sprinklers, no alerts at the fire station for rapid attendance, sleepy security guards.

        It's meant to be a professionally run museum, you know in reality how big fires should get at museums, first hint of smoke and the fire brigade is there in just a few minutes and

        • Reading about it the whole operation had been let slip into total disrepair. No funding for ages. Building was suffering major maintenance issues.

        • The most likely reason is corruption, but not necessarily theft. They didn't even install a sprinkler system. How third world is that?

    • I would love to see museums that haven't been devastated do something of this nature as an insurance policy.

      This exists, but we need to make this a standard for all museums, rather than just a few superstar institutions.

  • by Ichijo ( 607641 ) on Saturday September 08, 2018 @04:20PM (#57277074) Journal

    Were they destroyed in the fire also?

    The negatives? Burned up in the same fire?

    The digital copies? Also destroyed?

    The backup tapes? Were they all kept onsite?

  • There is this interesting "Project Mosul" (now called Rekrei) which started by attempting to create 3D models of the cultural treasures ISIS destroyed by using many old photographs - it seems they have expanded since then:
    https://projectmosul.org/ [projectmosul.org]

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