Alan Edward Klein
Member
Overall, I agree - although the jury is out on this one, of course. So far, the memory of "the internet" has proven to be pretty ruthless much of the time.
An anecdote comes to mind - my wife is young enough to have grown up with mobile phones (well, so am I, at least to an extent...and insofar as I ever grew up of course), so she was texting her friends as a teenager. Fearing that she might at some point lose those glorious conversations, she has (I kid you not) transcribed those conversations in a diary on several occasions (again, I'm not making this up).
Maybe we could propose that people would draw a facsimile of the photos sent to them through WhatsApp etc.
Exactly. People often point out the fleeting nature of digital media, whilst ignoring or forgetting the fact that can be (and often are) also readily duplicated at effectively zero marginal cost.
Your wife's story reminds me of when my niece died on 9-11, her mom, my sister, had a message that she left recorded on my sister's internet answering machine. So I made an audio file for her that she requested. Unfortunately, my sister has passed away since then, but I still have a copy of it on my desktop.