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posted by Fnord666 on Monday February 25 2019, @02:46PM   Printer-friendly
from the hopefully-it-includes-dilbert dept.

Submitted via IRC for chromas

Thirty-million-page backup of humanity headed to moon aboard Israeli lander

On Thursday night, a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket carried an Israeli-made spacecraft named Beresheet beyond the grasp of Earth's gravity and sent it on its way to the surface of the moon. On board Beresheet is a specially designed disc encoded with a 30-million-page archive of human civilization built to last billions of years into the future.

The backup for humanity has been dubbed "The Lunar Library" by its creator, the Arch Mission Foundation (AMF).

"The idea is to place enough backups in enough places around the solar system, on an ongoing basis, that our precious knowledge and biological heritage can never be lost," the nonprofit's co-founder Nova Spivack told me via email.

The AMF also placed a small test archive on Elon Musk's red Tesla Roadster that was launched in the direction of Mars aboard the first Falcon Heavy demonstration mission last year. That archive consisted of Isaac Asimov's Foundation Trilogy encoded in a disc made of quartz silica glass made to last millions of years as the Roadster orbits the sun. The AMF has also placed a solid-state copy of Wikipedia on board a cubesat from SpaceChain in low-Earth orbit.

Part of the motivation for the far-out project is to leave a copy of humanity's knowledge not just in the cloud, but far beyond the clouds, should the impacts of climate change or a potential nuclear war do us or the planet in at some point in the future.

"While I am optimistic that humanity will rise to the challenge and develop a multinational  planetary defense initiative to mitigate these planetary risks, it is also prudent to have a plan B," Spivack said. "Instead of one backup in one place our strategy is 'many copies, many places' -- and we plan to send updates on a regular basis."


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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday February 26 2019, @01:36PM

    by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday February 26 2019, @01:36PM (#806899)

    On board a cubesat in LEO? The absolute worst place for a backup. Should we ever get into the situation of needing it, we won't be able to recover it. And when the satellite is no longer maintained, as LEO satellite it will burn up in the atmosphere not too long after it goes out of usage, even if we no longer have the ability to control it, so it's not even a good place to save it for possible aliens visiting the solar system some time in the future.